학술논문

New astroglial injury-defined biomarkers for neurotrauma assessment
Document Type
article
Source
Cerebrovascular and Brain Metabolism Reviews. 37(10)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Traumatic Head and Spine Injury
Biotechnology
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Brain Disorders
Injuries and accidents
Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins
Astrocytes
Biomarkers
Brain Concussion
Brain Injuries
Traumatic
Cells
Cultured
Fatty Acid-Binding Protein 7
Fructose-Bisphosphate Aldolase
Humans
Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
Kinetics
Phosphoproteins
Proteome
Tumor Suppressor Proteins
brain trauma
proteomics
cell culture
cerebrospinal fluid
exploratory factor analysis
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an expanding public health epidemic with pathophysiology that is difficult to diagnose and thus treat. TBI biomarkers should assess patients across severities and reveal pathophysiology, but currently, their kinetics and specificity are unclear. No single ideal TBI biomarker exists. We identified new candidates from a TBI CSF proteome by selecting trauma-released, astrocyte-enriched proteins including aldolase C (ALDOC), its 38kD breakdown product (BDP), brain lipid binding protein (BLBP), astrocytic phosphoprotein (PEA15), glutamine synthetase (GS) and new 18-25kD-GFAP-BDPs. Their levels increased over four orders of magnitude in severe TBI CSF. First post-injury week, ALDOC levels were markedly high and stable. Short-lived BLBP and PEA15 related to injury progression. ALDOC, BLBP and PEA15 appeared hyper-acutely and were similarly robust in severe and mild TBI blood; 25kD-GFAP-BDP appeared overnight after TBI and was rarely present after mild TBI. Using a human culture trauma model, we investigated biomarker kinetics. Wounded (mechanoporated) astrocytes released ALDOC, BLBP and PEA15 acutely. Delayed cell death corresponded with GFAP release and proteolysis into small GFAP-BDPs. Associating biomarkers with cellular injury stages produced astroglial injury-defined (AID) biomarkers that facilitate TBI assessment, as neurological deficits are rooted not only in death of CNS cells, but also in their functional compromise.