HYBRID EVENT: You can participate in person at Rome, Italy or Virtually from your home or work.
Speaker at Alzheimer's Disease & Dementia Conference 2025 - Sharmistha Dey
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, India
Title : New vision for early detection of alzheimer's disease

Abstract:

Background: Recent research on Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has highlighted that the oxidative damage is the earliest event of disease. These oxidative modifications are closely associated with inflammatory molecules. It is necessary to explore these two pathways with AD pathophysiology and targeted for therapeutic intervention. At present, the most validated AD biomarker is Aβ levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and tau PET scan. None of the techniques can be used to monitor the disease with the response of treatment. The present study focussed on novel molecules in these two pathways for establishing blood-based biomarker and therapeutic interventions.

Method: Blood samples were collected from 46 AD patients, 37 mild cognitive impairment (MCI) patients and 35 geriatric-control (GC). The levels of inflammatory molecules (LOX-5, LOX-12, GSK-3β, p53, NFkb) and antioxidant molecules (FOXO, Sestrin, Sirtuins) were measured by using surface plasmon resonance and verified using Western blot in serum from AD, MCI, and GC. Statistical analysis, including Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC), was done for further affirmation with all demographic data and clinical assessment score. The Alzheimer’s disease model neurotoxic SH-SY5Y cell line was treated with antioxidant plant extract for rescue effect on SH-SY5Y to see the effect on expression level of above mentioned proteins.

Results: The significant alteration of some of these proteins were observed in the blood of AD patients compare to MCI and geriatric control. These proteins also showed positive correlation with the known hallmark Tau, pTau and a?-amyloid in the study group. A significant (p<0.0001) downhill correlation was found between Tau as well as p-Tau181 levels with HMSE and MoCA score. The treatment with antioxidant plant extract showed rescue effect of neurotoxicity by enhancing antioxidant enzymes thereby decreased reactive oxygen species (ROS).

Conclusion: These proteins can serve as potential blood markers for the diagnosis of AD and supplementary antioxidant molecules can regulate and suppress their level by rescuing the neurotoxicity. This work has translational value and clinical utility in the future.

Biography:

Dr. Sharmistha Dey, Professor, Department of Biophysics, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India. She is a basic science researcher in the field of Medicine with specialization in Biophysics and focus on protein biology, for more than last 30 years. Her area of research on proteins and peptides of biological significance can be grouped under three broad headings: bio-markers of neurodegenerative diseases, bio-markers of cancer, bio-markers of ageing and age related diseases; and plant proteins with therapeutic utility. She has more than 150 publications on various aspects of her research work in reputed and high impact journals. Her research contribution was recognized by Indian Council of Medical Research in 2016 with Prof SM Marwah Award for excellence in the field of ageing research. Her research papers have been repeatedly awarded AIIMS Excellence Research Award which was instituted in 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018. She has been awarded two international fellowships from Department of Biotechnology and Indian Council of Medical Research. She got first prize in AIIMS Oncology Research in 2019.

Watsapp