- Fanara, Patrizia;
- Wong, Po-Yin A;
- Husted, Kristofor H;
- Liu, Shanshan;
- Liu, Victoria M;
- Kohlstaedt, Lori A;
- Riiff, Timothy;
- Protasio, Joan C;
- Boban, Drina;
- Killion, Salena;
- Killian, Maudi;
- Epling, Lorrie;
- Sinclair, Elisabeth;
- Peterson, Julia;
- Price, Richard W;
- Cabin, Deborah E;
- Nussbaum, Robert L;
- Brühmann, Jörg;
- Brandt, Roland;
- Christine, Chadwick W;
- Aminoff, Michael J;
- Hellerstein, Marc K
Progress in neurodegenerative disease research is hampered by the lack of biomarkers of neuronal dysfunction. We here identified a class of cerebrospinal fluid-based (CSF-based) kinetic biomarkers that reflect altered neuronal transport of protein cargo, a common feature of neurodegeneration. After a pulse administration of heavy water (2H2O), distinct, newly synthesized 2H-labeled neuronal proteins were transported to nerve terminals and secreted, and then appeared in CSF. In 3 mouse models of neurodegeneration, distinct 2H-cargo proteins displayed delayed appearance and disappearance kinetics in the CSF, suggestive of aberrant transport kinetics. Microtubule-modulating pharmacotherapy normalized CSF-based kinetics of affected 2H-cargo proteins and ameliorated neurodegenerative symptoms in mice. After 2H2O labeling, similar neuronal transport deficits were observed in CSF of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) compared with non-PD control subjects, which indicates that these biomarkers are translatable and relevant to human disease. Measurement of transport kinetics may provide a sensitive method to monitor progression of neurodegeneration and treatment effects.