Omics sciences for systems biology in Alzheimer's disease: State-of-the-art of the evidence

Ageing Res Rev. 2021 Aug:69:101346. doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2021.101346. Epub 2021 Apr 27.

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by non-linear, genetic-driven pathophysiological dynamics with high heterogeneity in biological alterations and disease spatial-temporal progression. Human in-vivo and post-mortem studies point out a failure of multi-level biological networks underlying AD pathophysiology, including proteostasis (amyloid-β and tau), synaptic homeostasis, inflammatory and immune responses, lipid and energy metabolism, oxidative stress. Therefore, a holistic, systems-level approach is needed to fully capture AD multi-faceted pathophysiology. Omics sciences - genomics, epigenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, lipidomics - embedded in the systems biology (SB) theoretical and computational framework can generate explainable readouts describing the entire biological continuum of a disease. Such path in Neurology is encouraged by the promising results of omics sciences and SB approaches in Oncology, where stage-driven pathway-based therapies have been developed in line with the precision medicine paradigm. Multi-omics data integrated in SB network approaches will help detect and chart AD upstream pathomechanistic alterations and downstream molecular effects occurring in preclinical stages. Finally, integrating omics and neuroimaging data - i.e., neuroimaging-omics - will identify multi-dimensional biological signatures essential to track the clinical-biological trajectories, at the subpopulation or even individual level.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Biomarker signatures; Multiple omics; Pathophysiology; Precision medicine; Systems biology.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Alzheimer Disease* / genetics
  • Genomics
  • Humans
  • Metabolomics
  • Precision Medicine
  • Systems Biology*