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2000
Volume 16, Issue 5
  • ISSN: 1567-2026
  • E-ISSN: 1875-5739

Abstract

Background: Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is an important cause of stroke and vascular cognitive impairment (VCI), leading to subcortical ischemic vascular dementia. As a hereditary form of SVD with early onset, cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) represents a pure form of SVD and may thus serve as a model disease for SVD. To date, underlying molecular mechanisms linking vascular pathology and subsequent neuronal damage in SVD are incompletely understood. Objective: We performed comparative transcriptional profiling microarray and proteomic analyses on post-mortem frontal lobe specimen from 2 CADASIL patients and 5 non neurologically diseased controls in order to identify dysregulated pathways potentially involved in the development of tissue damage in CADASIL. Methods: Transcriptional microarray analysis of material extracted from frontal grey and white matter (WM) identified subsets of up- or down-regulated genes enriched into biological pathways mostly in WM areas. Proteomic analysis of these regions also highlighted cellular processes identified by dysregulated proteins. Results: Discrepancies between proteomic and transcriptomic data were observed, but a number of pathways were commonly associated with genes and corresponding proteins, such as: “ribosome” identified by upregulated genes and proteins in frontal cortex or “spliceosome” associated with down-regulated genes and proteins in frontal WM. Conclusion: This latter finding suggests that defective expression of spliceosomal components may alter widespread splicing profile, potentially inducing expression abnormalities that could contribute to cerebral WM damage in CADASIL.

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/content/journals/cnr/10.2174/1567202616666191023111059
2019-10-01
2025-12-23
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/content/journals/cnr/10.2174/1567202616666191023111059
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  • Article Type:
    Research Article
Keyword(s): CADASIL; pathomechanisms; proteomic; ribosome; spliceosome; transcriptomic
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