Abstract
Increased neurofilament light (NfL; NEFL) protein in biofluids is reflective of neurodegeneration and has gained interest as a biomarker across neurodegenerative diseases. In spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3), the most common dominantly inherited ataxia, patients exhibit progressive NfL increases in peripheral blood when becoming symptomatic, and NfL remains stably elevated throughout further disease course.
However, progressive NfL changes are not yet validated in relevant preclinical SCA3 animal models, hindering its application as a biomarker during therapeutic development. We used ultra-sensitive single-molecule array (Simoa) to measure blood NfL over disease progression in YACQ84 mice, a model of SCA3, assessing relationships with measures of disease severity including age, CAG repeat size and magnetic resonance spectroscopy. YACQ84 mice exhibited plasma NfL increases that were concomitant with ataxia-related motor deficits as well as increased serum NfL, which correlated with previously established neurometabolite abnormalities, two relevant measures of disease in patients with SCA3. Our findings establish the progression of NfL increases in the preclinical YACQ84 mouse, further supporting the utility of blood NfL as a peripheral neurodegeneration biomarker and informing on coinciding timelines of different measures of SCA3 pathogenesis.
Keywords: ATXN3; Ataxia; Blood biomarker; Neurochemical; Neurodegeneration; Polyglutamine.
© 2023. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd.
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests G.Ö. consults for IXICO Technologies Limited, which provides neuroimaging services and digital biomarker analytics to biopharmaceutical firms conducting clinical trials for SCAs, and receives research support from Biogen, which develops therapeutics for SCA3. The other authors declare no competing or financial interests.
See complete article and the Figure illustrations, found here
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