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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Centrally-linked longitudinal peripheral biomarkers of AD in multi-ethnic populations

$82.91M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING
Recipient Organization Mayo Clinic Jacksonville
Country United States
Start Date Mar 15, 2023
End Date Feb 29, 2028
Duration 1,812 days
Number of Grantees 4
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10808852
Grant Description

Summary Abstract (30 lines): Existing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and neuroimaging measures of amyloid ß, tau and neurodegeneration (A,T,N) serve as useful diagnostic biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), however there remains an urgent, unmet need for blood based biomarkers in AD. First, multi-omic studies discovered many perturbed biological

pathways in AD, however, systematic studies for biomarkers that capture these diverse biological facets of AD are limited. Second, AD is a heterogeneous disorder but biomarkers that can distinguish the biological subtypes of AD are lacking. Third, core AD neuropathology often co-exists with other neuropathologies such as

vascular disease (V). These co-morbidities and co-pathologies need to be considered in biomarker discovery. Fourth, existing biomarker studies are heavily focused on non-Hispanic Whites (NHW). Similar studies in underrepresented populations (URP) are needed. This U19, bringing together >40 experts across 13

institutions, aims to bridge these knowledge gaps for discovery and validation of Centrally-linked Longitudinal pEripheral biomARkers of AD (CLEAR-AD) in multi-ethnic populations. CLEAR-AD U19 is based on the premise that AD is a complex disorder in which many biological pathways are disrupted due to multi-omic

perturbations, which can be detected in brain and reflected in blood, i.e. centrally-linked peripheral molecular signatures (CLPMS). The specific aims of CLEAR-AD U19 are: 1) To discover CLPMS of the complex and heterogeneous AD pathophysiology and its co-pathologies. 2) To identify longitudinal CLPMS that detect and

predict dynamic neuroimaging, fluid biomarker, and clinical changes across AD spectrum. 3) To characterize differences and similarities in CLPMS profiles across NHW, African American (AA) and Latino American (LA) participants to uncover biomarker patterns in multi-ethnic groups. 4) To make these vast resources available to

the scientific community to amplify and accelerate its impact. In this U19 managed by the Administrative Core, we will leverage NIH-funded ADNI, MCSA and ADRC cohorts of >3,700 multi-ethnic participants to generate >20,000 multi-omics measures (Omics Core) that will be processed and integrated with >48,000 harmonized

AD cognitive, neuroimaging and fluid endophenotypes (Analytic Core). Using these data, we will identify brain region and cell-type specific CLPMS, which reflect biological subtypes of AD and disease stage (Project 1). We will discover longitudinal changes in CLPMS that predict cognitive and A/T/N/V progression (Project 2). We will

define longitudinal cognitive and A/T/N/V changes and CLPMS in URP that are either conserved with NHW or population-specific (Project 3). This U19 will a) Identify the next generation of AD biomarkers with mechanistic insights; b) Establish a precision medicine approach for rigorous multi-omics biomarker discovery and

validation in AD; c) Discover molecules that can serve as biomarkers and therapeutic targets; d) Enhance biomarker research in trial-ready multi-ethnic populations; and e) Generate and share a vast and harmonized resource of endophenotype and multi-omics data in NIH-funded cohorts.

All Grantees

Mayo Clinic Jacksonville

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