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Development of a sensitive trial-ready poly(GP) CSF biomarker assay for C9orf72-associated frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Authors :
Katherine M Wilson
Eszter Katona
Idoia Glaria
Imogen J. Swift
Aitana Sogorb-Esteve
Carolin Heller
Arabella Bouzigues
Amanda J Heslegrave
Saurabh Patil
Susovan Mohapatra
Yuanjing Liu
Jaya Goyal
Raquel Sanchez-Valle
Robert Laforce
Matthis Synofzik
James B. Rowe
Elizabeth Finger
Rik Vandenberghe
Chris R. Butler
Alexander Gerhard
John van Swieten
Harro Seelaar
Barbara Borroni
Daniela Galimberti
Alexandre de Mendonça
Mario Masellis
Carmela Tartaglia
Markus Otto
Caroline Graff
Simon Ducharme
Andrea Malaspina
Henrik Zetterberg
Ramakrishna Boyanapalli
Jonathan D Rohrer
Adrian M Isaacs
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

A GGGGCC repeat expansion in the C9orf72 gene is the most common cause of genetic frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). As potential therapies targeting the repeat expansion are now entering clinical trials, sensitive biomarker assays of target engagement are urgently required. We utilised the single molecule array (Simoa) platform to develop an immunoassay for measuring poly(GP) dipeptide repeat proteins (DPRs) generated by the repeat expansion in CSF of people with C9orf72-associated FTD/ALS. We show the assay to be highly sensitive and robust, passing extensive qualification criteria including low intra- and inter-plate variability, a high precision and accuracy in measuring both calibrators and samples, dilutional parallelism, tolerance to sample and standard freeze-thaw and no haemoglobin interference. We used this assay to measure poly(GP) DPRs in the CSF of samples collected through the Genetic FTD Initiative. We found it had 100% specificity and 100% sensitivity and a large window for detecting target engagement, as the C9orf72 CSF sample with the lowest poly(GP) signal had 8-fold higher signal than controls and on average values from C9orf72 samples were 38-fold higher than controls, which all fell below the lower limit of quantification of the assay. These data indicate that a Simoa-based poly(GP) DPR assay is suitable for use in clinical trials to determine target engagement of therapeutics aimed at reducing C9orf72 repeat-containing transcripts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3e289e4539d4eed389e07eae029a4847