Proteomic biomarkers of sleep apnea

Author:

Ambati Aditya1,Ju Yo-El2,Lin Ling1,Olesen Alexander N1,Koch Henriette1,Hedou Julien Jacques1,Leary Eileen B1ORCID,Sempere Vicente Peris1,Mignot Emmanuel1,Taheri Shahrad3

Affiliation:

1. Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA

2. Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO

3. Department of Medicine and Clinical Research Core, Weill Cornell Medicine—Qatar, Qatar Foundation—Education City, Doha, Qatar

Abstract

Abstract Study Objectives Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is characterized by recurrent partial to complete upper airway obstructions during sleep, leading to repetitive arousals and oxygen desaturations. Although many OSA biomarkers have been reported individually, only a small subset have been validated through both cross-sectional and intervention studies. We sought to profile serum protein biomarkers in OSA in unbiased high throughput assay. Methods A highly multiplexed aptamer array (SomaScan) was used to profile 1300 proteins in serum samples from 713 individuals in the Stanford Sleep Cohort, a patient-based registry. Outcome measures derived from overnight polysomnography included Obstructive Apnea Hypopnea Index (OAHI), Central Apnea Index (CAI), 2% Oxygen Desaturation index, mean and minimum oxygen saturation indices during sleep. Additionally, a separate intervention-based cohort of 16 individuals was used to assess proteomic profiles pre- and post-intervention with positive airway pressure. Results OAHI was associated with 65 proteins, predominantly pathways of complement, coagulation, cytokine signaling, and hemostasis which were upregulated. CAI was associated with two proteins including Roundabout homolog 3 (ROBO3), a protein involved in bilateral synchronization of the pre-Bötzinger complex and cystatin F. Analysis of pre- and post intervention samples revealed IGFBP-3 protein to be increased while LEAP1 (Hepicidin) to be decreased with intervention. An OAHI machine learning classifier (OAHI >=15 vs OAHI<15) trained on SomaScan protein measures alone performed robustly, achieving 76% accuracy in a validation dataset. Conclusions Multiplex protein assays offer diagnostic potential and provide new insights into the biological basis of sleep disordered breathing.

Funder

Stanford Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine

National Institutes of Health

Washington University Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Qatar Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Clinical Neurology

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