Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAltered innate immunity has been long associated with late‐onset Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and its associated blood‐based biomarkers are important for AD diagnosis and prognosis.MethodWe collected 38 participants from the AIBL study, including 22 cognitive normal (CN) individuals with negative amyloid burden (Centiloid [CL] < 15), 5 CN individuals with positive amyloid burden (CL > 15), and 11 mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD cases. A total of 17 leukocyte surface antigens were examined by flow cytometry immunophenotyping and compared between healthy controls (CN Ab ‐ve), pre‐clinical patients (CN Ab +ve), and clinical cases (MCI & AD), including CD36, MerTK, Clec7a, RAGE, Tyro3, CR1 (CD35), CX3CR1, CCR2, Axl, LILRB2, LILRB3, LILRB4, PILRA, and P2×7.ResultWe identified leukocyte surface markers differentially expressed between HC, pre‐clinical patients, and clinical cases. Mean fluorescence intensities of CD85d and CD85k were significantly reduced in pre‐clinical patients and cases compared with HC, implicating CD85d and CD85k downregulation in AD pathogenesis. Significant upregulation of RAGE, Tyro3, CCR2, CD85a, and PILRA was also noted in cases compared with HC. Leukocyte surface expressions of RAGE, CCR2, PILRA, and CD85k were significantly associated with the Preclinical Alzheimer’s Cognitive Composite (PACC), which is one of the most accurate estimates of cognition in AD diagnosis.ConclusionOur preliminary investigations into these leukocyte markers demonstrated their dysregulations in pre‐clinical stage of AD, implicating early deficits in innate immunity, as supported by genomic studies of AD. This project will continue collecting more AIBL participants up to 200 to evaluate leukocyte surface markers more comprehensively, which would benefit AD screening and diagnosis.

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