Background: Diagnosis of Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with a vast number of challenges. This study aimed to assess the overlap of PD patients' transcriptomes in the substantia nigra (SN) with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to discover potential biomarkers for diagnosis.
Methods: GEO data were used to select genes with significant changes in expression level in the SN region and eligible studies. Also, transcriptome data related to blood of PD patients with other neurodegenerative diseases (ND) was considered. Differential expression genes between PD and control were evaluated in the SN and blood, and RT-qPCR was applied to validate the findings.
Results: At the expression level, no significant similarity in long non-coding RNA was found between the patients' SN and blood. While in silico results revealed 16 common mRNAs in SN and blood with significant expression levels. Among all overexpressed mRNAs, HSPA1A/B expression level had the highest expression difference between control and PD samples. Moreover, DGKH had the highest score of down-regulated genes in both blood and SN. The NOTCH pathway had the highest score pathway among up-regulated pathways, and the expression levels of NOTCH2, H4C8, and H2BC21 associated with this pathway had the most ability to separate the control and PD populations. Furthermore, RT-qPCR results revealed that HSPA1A/B, NOTCH2, and H4C8 were overexpressed in PD PBMCs, while DGKH expression levels were lower compared to controls.
Conclusion: Our findings indicate that expression levels of HSPA1A/B, DGKH, and NOTCH2 could be applied as candidate biomarkers to diagnose PD patients in the SN region and PBMCs.
Keywords: Biomarker; Gene expression; Microarray; Neurodegenerative diseases.
© 2023. Fondazione Società Italiana di Neurologia.