Division of Life Science
Identifying Biomarkers of Alzheimer’s Disease for the Development of Targeted Therapy
Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which affects over 50 million people worldwide, involves the dysfunction and loss of brain cells. Its symptoms include progressive memory loss, impaired movement, reasoning, and judgment. While patients often only seek medical attention and are diagnosed when they have memory problems, AD affects the brain at least 10-20 years before symptoms appear. Traditional diagnostic methods of the disease rely heavily on cognitive tests, brain imaging, and lumbar puncture, procedures that are expensive, invasive, and often unavailable in many countries.
As blood proteins are emerging candidates for AD, our team of researchers – in collaboration with researchers at University College London and clinicians at the Prince of Wales and Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Hong Kong – have systematically quantified more than 1000 plasma proteins with proximity extension assay (PEA), an ultrasensitive blood-based protein detection technology. Out of the 429 plasma proteins found to be dysregulated in the Hong Kong Chinese AD cohort, 19 were defined as “hub proteins” for AD. A scoring system has then been developed that can distinguish AD patients from healthy individuals at more than 96% accuracy. Furthermore, the system is also capable of differentiating the early, intermediate, and late stages of AD, which can be used for the monitoring of disease progression.
As the most comprehensive study of blood proteins in AD patients to date, the work has recently been published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association and has also been featured and actively discussed on different scholarly exchange platforms on AD research such as Alzforum.
The work has formed a strong foundation that contributes to the development targeted therapy that can be utilized and further optimized for different populations around the world.
The 19 identified plasma hub proteins (yellow dots) are dysregulated in AD patient.
- President
- The Morningside Professor of Life Science
- Chair Professor, Division of Life Science
- Director of State Key Laboratory of Molecular Neuroscience
科研發現
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科大突破性發現罕見腫瘤細胞「間諜」 揭示不為人知的癌細胞
香港科技大學(科大)研究人員研發了一種可為冷凍和新鮮細胞組織樣本同時進行單細胞DNA和RNA測序的新技術,更利用這方法識別出偽裝為正常細胞的罕見腦腫瘤細胞「間諜」。是次發現為一些最複雜和罕見腫瘤的研究帶來突破,並為未來的藥物靶標發現開闢新方向。
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解構秀麗隱桿線蟲pri-miRNA加工複合體的分子機制
小分子核糖核酸(microRNAs,以下簡稱miRNAs)是一種在動物和人類基因調控中發揮重要作用的小型核糖核酸(RNA),一直令許多科學家為之著迷。在生物學和醫學中,一項非常重要的研究範疇就是miRNA如何控制和調節基因表達,因為科學界一般相信,這個課題對理解細胞突變有重大作用,對於治療癌症和其他與細胞突變有關的疾病,至為關鍵。