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Annotation


Marcotte ER, Srivastava LK, Quirion R. cDNA microarray and proteomic approaches in the study of brain diseases: focus on schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease. Pharmacol Ther. 2003 Oct;100(1):63-74. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: New Microarray Data Offer Grist for AD Hypothesizing Mills

Comment by:  Karoly Mirnics
Submitted 8 February 2004  |  Permalink Posted 8 February 2004

The manuscript by Blalock et al. is one of the most comprehensive and intriguing postmortem DNA microarray studies to date. Importantly, this manuscript goes beyond the “most changed gene” concept, and focuses on the transcript networks putatively affected in the hippocampus of subjects with AD. The authors build a convincing case that the observed, coordinated expression pattern changes represent molecular correlates of cognitive decline observed in AD.

The generated dataset is extremely valuable and of great interest to a number of researchers who have no access to postmortem brain tissue. The performed data analyses are sound but, just like all other approaches in the microarray field, have caveats. It will be interesting to test if different analytical approaches to this data reveal some currently unanticipated relationships. Despite the statistical arguments, microarray data validation with an independent method is strongly recommended in these studies. This dataset can live up to its full potential only if the critical gene expression changes are verified by qPCR,...  Read more


  Related News: New Microarray Data Offer Grist for AD Hypothesizing Mills

Comment by:  Stephen D. Ginsberg
Submitted 9 February 2004  |  Permalink Posted 9 February 2004

The comprehensive report by Eric Blalock et al. correlates gene expression levels garnered from cDNA microarray analysis of Alzheimer’s disease hippocampus with cognitive scores on the Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) and neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) counts across 31 people (nine controls, 22 AD patients with varying degrees of AD progression). Interestingly, the researchers identified many classes of transcripts that are regulated in what they deem “incipient AD,” or those with MMSE scores >20. Although it is somewhat unclear whether incipient AD is similar to the classification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), without other global measures of neuropsychological testing it is quite possible that these two groups have considerable overlap. The researchers employed higher-order statistical analysis of gene expression using a package called the EASE program. This revealed upregulation of signaling markers and tumor suppressor genes, as well as oligodendrocyte growth factors, among others. Based upon these observations, the group put forth a provocative new model of AD...  Read more

  Related News: New Microarray Data Offer Grist for AD Hypothesizing Mills

Comment by:  Paul Coleman, ARF Advisor
Submitted 9 February 2004  |  Permalink Posted 9 February 2004

In this study, the authors used Affymetrix arrays to examine transcript expression in hippocampal CA1 of 31 cases, spanning the range from controls > “incipient” AD > moderate > severe AD. Each of 9,921 transcripts was correlated with NFT “scores," and/or MMSE scores. Thus, almost 20,000 correlation coefficients were computed. The false discovery rate was calculated as ~0.20. Out of the 9,921 transcripts, 3,413 were determined to be correlated with NFT and/or MMSE. Of these, 1,977 were upregulated, while 1,436 were downregulated. This finding of more upregulated transcripts is consistent with data from other array studies. However, a number of studies have found an overall decrease in transcript level in AD. These two findings can be reconciled by assuming that increased expression of upregulated genes is insufficient to overcome the decreased expression of downregulated genes. In general, many of the usual suspects were identified in the authors’ data.

A separate analysis of the “incipient” AD cases (marginal NFT and MMSE scores) yielded interesting differences between these...  Read more

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