Alzheimer & Parkinson
Metabolites released from apoptotic cells in central nervous system orchestrates the pathological process of Alzheimer disease through improving autophagy
Apoptosis, a programmed cell death process activated in Alzheimer disease (AD), is not limited to neurons but extends to all cell types within the central nervous system (CNS). However, how apoptotic cells mediate their impact on surrounding cells and contribute to the pathological progression of AD remains largely unclear. Here, we report that in 5×FAD mice, cells surrounding amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques undergo apoptosis, which occurs concurrently with elevated macroautophagy/autophagy. The...
Insights into Mechanism of Ionic Liquids for Protein Stability: Future Implications for Neurodegeneration Treatment
Neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by a gradual loss of neurons, cellular dysfunction, loss of intricate synaptic networks and brain damage, which are going to be the second leading cause of death in future. These proteinopathies are marked by abnormal amyloid fibril deposition, aberrant aggregation of misfolded proteins via polymerization, where protein aggregates serve as key pathological hallmarks in Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and multiple system atrophy disorders. These toxic...
Sulfatide deficiency-induced astrogliosis and myelin lipid dyshomeostasis are independent of TREM2-mediated microglial activation
Disrupted lipid homeostasis and neuroinflammation often co-exist in neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the intrinsic connection and causal relationship between these deficits remain elusive. Our previous studies show that the loss of sulfatide (ST), a class of myelin-enriched lipids, causes AD-like neuroinflammatory responses, cognitive impairment, bladder enlargement, and lipid dyshomeostasis. To better understand the relationship between neuroinflammation...
Amyloid-beta and Tau in Alzheimer's disease: pathogenesis, mechanisms, and interplay
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease and the most prevalent type of dementia characterized by pathological deposition of amyloid-β plaques/deposits and tau tangles within the brain parenchyma. This progressive ailment is featured by irreversible cognitive impairment and memory loss, often misdiagnosed as the consequence of old age in elderlies. Pathologically, synaptic dysfunction occurs at the early stages and then progresses into neurodegeneration with neuronal...
Amyloid-ID: photocatalytic profiling of amyloid deposits in Alzheimer's disease tissue
Deposition of amyloid proteins and their associated interactome is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other amyloidosis diseases, with their composition implying disease etiology. However, precise in-situ micro-dissection of amyloid deposits in AD brain tissue remains a challenge. In this work, we first divert the excited state energy of Thioflavin T from singlet fluorescence to triplet photocatalytic amyloid protein labeling through molecular engineering, while maintain its pan-amyloid...
An updated definition of freezing of gait
Freezing of gait (FOG) is among the most debilitating symptoms of Parkinson disease and related disorders, often resulting in falls and a loss of independence. FOG has an episodic and heterogeneous nature that makes it difficult to measure and treat. The field currently lacks a consensus on how to precisely define this phenomenon. For this reason, the International Consortium for Freezing of Gait convened a group of experts to establish an updated 'clinical' definition of FOG for use in the...
ACSS2 upregulation enhances neuronal resilience to aging and tau-associated neurodegeneration
Epigenetic mechanisms, including histone acetylation, regulate learning and memory and underlie Alzheimer's disease and related dementia (ADRD). Acetyl-CoA synthetase 2 (ACSS2), an enzyme generating acetyl-CoA, locally regulates histone acetylation and gene expression in neuronal nuclei. This regulatory mechanism may be a promising target for therapeutic intervention in neurodegenerative diseases. Previously, we showed that systemic ACSS2 knockout mice, although largely normal in physiology,...
Highly sensitive chemiluminescence imaging of misfolded proteins in neurodegenerative models
Protein misfolding in the brain is a key pathological hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases. Optical imaging of misfolded proteins in disease models is essential for elucidating etiology and early diagnosis. However, developing specific optical imaging probes for each misfolded protein is time-consuming and challenging, leaving many pathological targets without effective detection tools, especially for in vivo imaging. Here, we present a dual-mode chemiluminescence strategy that enables both...
Fake data from trial sites ruin studies, drug firms say
Alzheimer's drug developer accuses companies it hired of providing "medically impossible" results.
State-specific enhancer landscapes govern microglial plasticity
Single-cell transcriptomic studies have identified distinct microglial subpopulations with shared and divergent gene signatures across development, aging, and disease. Whether these microglial subsets represent ontogenically separate lineages of cells or are manifestations of plastic changes in microglial states downstream of some converging signals is unknown. Furthermore, despite the well-established role of enhancer landscapes underlying the identity of microglia, the extent to which histone...
Calcium overload induced mitochondrial and lysosomal dysfunction is regulated by Tousled-like kinase in a-synucleinopathy
As a pathological hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD), a-synucleinopathy induces various cellular damages, including calcium overload, mitochondrial and autophagic dysfunction, ultimately resulting in dopaminergic neuron death. However, the hierarchy of these detrimental events remains unclear. It is well established that a-synuclein can induce calcium overload through diverse mechanisms. To assess whether calcium overload plays a crucial detrimental role, we established a calcium overload...
Accurate detection of somatic single-nucleotide variants from bulk RNA-seq data using RNA-MosaicHunter
Somatic variants are increasingly recognized as contributors to diverse non-cancer, developmental, and aging-related disorders. However, most tools for detecting somatic single-nucleotide variants (sSNVs) were designed for DNA sequencing and primarily tailored to cancer datasets, leaving a critical gap in harnessing the rich potential of RNA-seq for sSNV identification, particularly in non-cancer tissues with low mutation rates. Here, we introduce RNA-MosaicHunter, a novel bioinformatic tool for...
USP25 inhibition ameliorates Parkinson's disease by restoring mitophagy
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that casts a significant shadow over global health and the identification of therapeutic targets for PD will empower more effective clinical treatment. The gene encoding the deubiquitinating enzyme USP25 has been identified as a susceptible locus for PD, but the role of USP25 in PD remains unknown. In this study, we found that USP25 exacerbated dopaminergic neuronal loss and motor deficits in murine models of PD by sabotaging...
TDP-43-mediated alternative polyadenylation is associated with a reduction in VPS35 and VPS29 expression in frontotemporal dementia
TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) dysfunction is a hallmark of several neurodegenerative diseases, including frontotemporal dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Alzheimer's disease. Although cryptic exon inclusion is a well-characterized consequence of TDP-43 loss of function, emerging evidence reveals broader roles in RNA metabolism, notably in the regulation of alternative polyadenylation (APA) of disease-relevant transcripts. In the present study, we examined 3' untranslated region...
Long-term effects of forty-hertz auditory stimulation as a treatment of Alzheimer's disease: Insights from an aged monkey model study
Based mainly on rodents studies, forty-hertz (40-Hz) physical stimulation has been regarded as a potential noninvasive treatment for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Considering the brain differences between rodents and humans, the effects of 40-Hz physical stimulation need to be further validated using nonhuman primates before its clinical application. Here, we took advantage of a rare opportunity to expose nine aged rhesus monkeys (26 to 31 y old) to 40-Hz auditory stimulation. Given the strong...
A minimally invasive dried blood spot biomarker test for the detection of Alzheimer's disease pathology
Blood biomarkers have emerged as accurate tools for detecting Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology, offering a minimally invasive alternative to traditional diagnostic methods such as imaging and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis. Yet, the logistics surrounding venipuncture for blood collection, although considerably simpler than the acquisition of imaging and CSF, require precise processing and storage specific to AD biomarkers that are still guided by medical personnel. Consequently,...
VACmap: an accurate long-read aligner for unraveling complex genomic rearrangements
Sequence alignment is essential for genomic research and clinical diagnostics, yet detecting complex rearrangements such as inversions, duplications, and gene conversions remains challenging due to allele complexity and limitations of current methods. We introduce VACmap, a non-linear mapping approach to enhance the detection and representation of all genetic variations. VACmap improves duplication detection from 20% to 90% in the Challenging Medically-Relevant Genes (CMRG) benchmark and...
Structure of pancreatic hIAPP fibrils derived from patients with type 2 diabetes
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) impacts the quality of life and lifespan of nearly 10% of the global population. Human islet amyloid polypeptide (hIAPP) constitutes a major component of islet amyloid deposition in patients with T2D, with hIAPP fibrils believed to play a key role in the pathogenesis of T2D. In this study, we determined the cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of hIAPP fibrils extracted from surgically resected pancreases of three donors with T2D. These fibrils exhibit a uniform...
Identification of aryl hydrocarbon receptor as a functional target that enhances astrocytic ApoE secretion
We report the discovery of a chemical series that enhances ApoE secretion from human astrocytes through mechanisms independent of LXR agonism. Target deconvolution of hits from a phenotypic screen in astrocytoma cells employed chemoproteomics, photoaffinity probes, in vitro KINOMEscan analysis, and targeted siRNA knockdown experiments. Photoaffinity labeling coupled with quantitative chemical proteomics identified aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a transcription factor not previously associated...
Investigations on the effects of SH2B2 on Parkinson's disease based on its in vivo and in vitro neurotoxic model
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by dopaminergic neuron loss, motor dysfunction, and Lewy body formation. Src homology 2B adaptor protein 2 (SH2B2), a member of the SH2B family with known roles in neuroregulation, has not been fully explored in PD. This study aimed to investigate the neuroprotective effects and mechanisms of SH2B2 in PD. MPTP-induced mouse model and MPP^(+)-treated SH-SY5Y cell model were established to simulate PD in vivo and in vitro. Mice were randomly divided into...
Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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