On the topic of whether it is normal or good/bad to have autophagy proteins in serum, the paper says:
There's no mention of ATG13 there. For ATG5, a study is referenced that found higher levels in Alzheimers, as well as a study that found lower levels of the same protein, also in Alzheimers. The paper on cerebral palsy found lower levels of ATG5 in cerebral palsy patients:
So, clearly we can't proceed with a certain idea of 'having any autophagy proteins in your serum, or higher levels than average, is definitely bad'.
Another complication is that there are different types of each autophagy protein. Aside from whether they are phosphorylated or not, there are different genetic variants e.g.
And for ATG13, the gene might be constant, but there are something called 'splice-variants' producing at least 5 different isoforms.
I'm wading out of my depth on this. But, potential complications to keep in mind.
One report found that plasma ATG5 level was elevated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients (Cho et al., 2019b), while another observed lower ATG5 and mitophagy in serum from patients exhibiting mild cognitive impairment, vascular dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease (Castellazzi et al., 2019). Beclin-1 and LC3 are observed in the serum in patients with acute ischemic stroke (Li et al., 2015). Levels of autophagic markers might be associated with coronary total occlusion and childhood cerebral palsy (Demircan et al., 2018; Xu et al., 2017). Upregulation of α-syn was demonstrated in plasma of PD patients (Bougea et al., 2019).However, it is not known if the levels of these autophagy markers are also altered in ME/CFS.
There's no mention of ATG13 there. For ATG5, a study is referenced that found higher levels in Alzheimers, as well as a study that found lower levels of the same protein, also in Alzheimers. The paper on cerebral palsy found lower levels of ATG5 in cerebral palsy patients:
Furthermore, mean plasma ATG5 levels were lower in CP patients than in controls, and individuals carrying the AA genotype of rs6568431 that was positively associated with CP had lower plasma ATG5 levels (P < 0.05). This study demonstrated an association of an ATG5 gene variant and low level of ATG5 protein with CP, and stronger associations with severe clinical manifestations were identified.
So, clearly we can't proceed with a certain idea of 'having any autophagy proteins in your serum, or higher levels than average, is definitely bad'.
Another complication is that there are different types of each autophagy protein. Aside from whether they are phosphorylated or not, there are different genetic variants e.g.
sourceSeveral GWASs for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) confirmed genetic associations between common variants in/near ATG5 and SLE, in Caucasians and Asians.
And for ATG13, the gene might be constant, but there are something called 'splice-variants' producing at least 5 different isoforms.
I don't know if different isoforms can exist in a single human, but it raises the possibility of ATG13 having different forms that perform different functions, some possibly outside the cells. So, potentially, to understand what ATG13 might be doing in ME/CFS, if anything, we might need to know about the isoforms.ATG13: Just a companion, or an executor of the autophagic program? 2014
Although vertebrate genomes have only one ATG13 gene, the alternative splicing of the ATG13 pre-mRNA results in the generation of several ATG13 splice variants. According to Jung et al. and the UniProt database, there is evidence for at least 5 different human ATG13 isoforms at the protein level (ref. 30 and UniProt entry O75143). The longest human isoform 1 (O75143-1) comprises 517 amino acids, while the shorter isoforms 2, 4, and 5 lack various exons in the middle and N-terminal region of ATG13. Interestingly, human isoform 3 (O75143-3) additionally lacks the last 75 C-terminal amino acids. Its mRNA instead makes up a part of the 3′ UTR and thus encodes for an alternative 15 amino acid sequence at the C terminus that completely differs from the other isoforms (Fig. 1B).30 Notably, ATG13 isoform 3 misses both the LIR motif, which is responsible for GABARAP interaction,32 as well as the ULK1 binding site. Isoform 3 is hence unable to interact with ULK1.30
I'm wading out of my depth on this. But, potential complications to keep in mind.