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Alzheimer & Parkinson

Isotope-encoded spatial biology identifies plaque-age-dependent maturation and synaptic loss in an Alzheimer's disease mouse model

1 day 18 hours ago
Understanding how amyloid beta (Aβ) plaques develop and lead to neurotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease remains a major challenge, particularly given the temporal delay and weak correlation between plaque deposition and cognitive decline. This study investigates how the evolving pathology of plaques affects the surrounding tissue, using a knock-in Aβ mouse model (App^(NL-F/NL-F)). We combined mass spectrometry imaging with stable isotope labeling to timestamp Aβ plaques from the moment of their...
Jack I Wood

Amyloid-beta-driven Alzheimer's disease reshapes the colonic immune system in mice

3 days 18 hours ago
The "gut-brain axis" is an emerging target in Alzheimer's disease (AD), although its immunological features remain poorly understood. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, coupled to extensive spectral-tuning flow cytometry validation of the colon immune compartment in the 5XFAD amyloid-β mouse model, we found several AD-associated changes including in B/plasma cell activity. Notably, levels of CXCR4^(+) antibody-secreting cells are reduced in 5XFAD colons. This change corresponds with accumulating...
Priya Makhijani

Unravelling Neuronal Death Mechanisms: The Role of Cytokines and Chemokines in Immune Imbalance in Alzheimer's Disease Progression

3 days 18 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is marked by neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration and cognitive decline, with emerging evidence highlighting the critical roles of cytokines and chemokines in its pathogenesis. Regulated cell death is a highly structured and meticulously coordinated series of molecular and signalling processes involving gene expression and protein activity. This mechanism is essential for normal developmental processes and the preservation of tissue homeostasis. Abnormal regulation of...
Sneha Kumari

Age-related hearing loss and dementia risk across the lifespan: mechanisms, equity, and prevention

3 days 18 hours ago
Age-related hearing loss (ARHL) has emerged as a significant and potentially modifiable risk factor for neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease. A growing body of evidence links ARHL to structural and functional changes in the brain, with implications for cognitive decline and dementia onset. However, both ARHL and dementia are multifactorial conditions shaped not only by biological mechanisms but also by broader social determinants of health. Inequities in access to hearing...
David G Loughrey

Targeting phagocytosis for amyloid-β clearance: implications of morphology remodeling and microglia activation probed by bifunctional chimaeras

3 days 18 hours ago
Amyloid-β (Aβ), a key driver of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis, possesses diverse harmful and clearance-resistant structures that present substantial challenges to therapeutic development. Here, we demonstrate that modulating Aβ morphology, rather than Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2)-dependent microglia activation, is essential for effective phagocytosis of Aβ species by microglia. By developing a bifunctional mechanistic probe (P2CSKn) designed to remodel Aβ and activate TLR2, we show it...
Youqiao Wang

Lactate lactylation in neural pathophysiology: Bridging metabolism and neurodegeneration

4 days 18 hours ago
Lactate is the end product of anaerobic glycolysis. Its functions in the central nervous system have garnered increasing attention as new roles continue to emerge. Beyond serving as an energy source and a substrate for gluconeogenesis, lactate also functions as a signaling molecule that regulates diverse cellular activities. Recent studies have demonstrated that lactate contributes to protein lactylation-a novel posttranslational modification-and plays a crucial role in metabolic reprogramming....
Mengran Cao

Deep learning of conversation-based 'filmstrips' for robust Alzheimer's disease detection

4 days 18 hours ago
Early detection of Alzheimer's disease remains complex and costly despite advancements in neurobiological markers. We propose an innovative approach based on the topological and kinetic analysis of verbal exchanges to distinguish patients from healthy individuals. Without requiring full transcription, we leverage a convolutional network capable of identifying discursive patterns indicative of cognitive impairments. Our experiments, conducted with 80 participants, demonstrate performance levels...
Arthur Trognon

CSF total tau as a proxy of synaptic degeneration

4 days 18 hours ago
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) total tau (t-tau) is considered a biomarker of neuronal degeneration alongside brain atrophy and fluid neurofilament light chain protein (NfL) in biomarker models of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, previous studies show that CSF t-tau correlates strongly with synaptic dysfunction/degeneration biomarkers like neurogranin (Ng) and synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP25). Here, we compare the association between CSF t-tau and synaptic degeneration and...
Carolina Soares

Amyloid β-dependent neuronal silencing through synaptic decoupling

5 days 18 hours ago
Amyloid β (Aβ)-dependent circuit dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is determined by a puzzling mix of hyperactive and inactive ("silent") brain neurons. Recent studies identified excessive glutamate accumulation as a key Aβ-dependent determinant of hyperactivity. The cellular mechanisms underlying neuronal silence depend on both Aβ and tau protein pathologies, with an unknown role of Aβ. Here, by using single-cell-initiated rabies virus (RV) tracing in mouse models of β-amyloidosis, we...
Yonghai Zhang

PTMs as molecular encoders: reprogramming chaperones into epichaperomes for network control in disease

5 days 18 hours ago
Recent discoveries reveal that post-translational modifications (PTMs) do more than regulate protein activity - they encode conformational states that transform chaperones into epichaperomes: multimeric scaffolds that rewire protein-protein interaction networks. This emerging paradigm expands the framework of chaperone biology in disease and provides a structural basis for systems-level dysfunction in disorders such as cancer and Alzheimer's disease. This review explores how PTMs within...
Feixia Chu

Impaired MAPT/tau-secretory lysosomes are linked to cognitive vulnerability in Alzheimer patients

5 days 18 hours ago
MAPT/tau proteins propagate between brain regions in a prion-like manner, driving the onset and progression of dementia in Alzheimer disease (AD). However, the basis for variability in dementia progression among AD patients remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that cognitively resilient AD patients, characterized by reduced MAPT/tau pathology, maintain lysosomal integrity, whereas cognitively vulnerable patients, exhibiting greater MAPT/tau burden, display lysosomal dysfunction....
Preeti Sharma

Amyloid-β oligomers, curvilinear and annular assemblies, imaged by cryo-ET, cryo-EM, and AFM

6 days 18 hours ago
Prefibrillar structures of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide are central to cytotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease. Time-resolved imaging of oligomers has enabled quantification of their extension. A snapshot of these prefibrillar assemblies has been characterized using a combination of cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET), cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) single-particle analysis, and atomic force microscopy (AFM). A highly consistent diameter for all curvilinear protofibrils and oligomers of 2.8...
Ruina Liang

Gut-brain nexus: Mapping multimodal links to neurodegeneration at biobank scale

6 days 18 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) are influenced by genetic and environmental factors. We conducted a biobank-scale study to (i) identify endocrine, nutritional, metabolic, and digestive disorders with potential causal or temporal associations with AD/PD risk before diagnosis; (ii) assess plasma biomarkers' specificity for AD/PD in the context of co-occurring gut related traits and disorders; and (iii) integrate multimodal datasets to enhance AD/PD prediction. Our findings...
Mohammad Shafieinouri

Putative PINK1/Parkin activators lower the threshold for mitophagy by sensitizing cells to mitochondrial stress

6 days 18 hours ago
The PINK1/Parkin pathway targets damaged mitochondria for degradation via mitophagy. Genetic evidence implicates impaired mitophagy in Parkinson's disease, making its pharmacological enhancement a promising therapeutic strategy. Here, we characterize two mitophagy activators: a novel Parkin activator, FB231, and the reported PINK1 activator MTK458. Both compounds lower the threshold for mitochondrial toxins to induce PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy. However, global proteomics revealed that FB231...
William M Rosencrans

Structural insights into the activation of TMEM175 by small molecule

6 days 18 hours ago
The upregulation of transmembrane protein 175 (TMEM175) has the potential to improve Parkinson's disease (PD) by aiding in the removal of α-synuclein aggregates. Understanding the structural basis of TMEM175 agonisms is crucial for uncovering its therapeutic potential for PD. Here, we have identified the first cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of human TMEM175 complexes with three agonists: DCY1020, DCY1040, and TUG-891. An open state of TMEM175 is unequivocally captured, laying the...
Xuewu Zhu

Biomolecular phase separation of microtubule-associated protein Tau and its role in the genesis of Brain Disorders

6 days 18 hours ago
Microtubule-associated tau (MAP) is a crucial component for cellular cytoskeleton stability. However, upon hyperphosphorylation, these tau proteins detach from microtubules, leading to the genesis of clumpy fibrillar-rich β or paired helical filamental structures known as amyloids. Such deposits predispose a multitude of fatal disorders, including Alzheimer's Disease. The initial event behind such genesis is still a mystery. Today, numerous research studies try to untangle the initial events...
Aurgha Kamal Bhandari

Breaking shackles of molecular weight and emission for NIR-II fluorophores by regulating Columb attraction interaction

6 days 18 hours ago
The second near-infrared (NIR-II) dyes provide advantages for in vivo imaging, but challenges persist. A primary issue is the lack of practicable strategies to balance emission wavelength and molecular weight, particularly for low-molecular-weight (<500 Da) NIR-II (λ(em) > 1000 nm) dyes. Here, we propose a strategy that tunes NIR-II emissions by reducing Coulomb attraction interaction, contrasting with traditional approaches that redshift absorption wavelengths through energy gap reduction....
Miantai Ye

Molecular and genetic landscapes of retina and brain microglia in neurodegenerative diseases

1 week ago
Microglia-driven dysregulation has emerged as a significant underlying mechanism in many neurodegenerative diseases, such as Age-related Macular Degeneration (AMD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). While both brain and retinal microglia originate from the yolk sac, it is uncertain whether they share molecular similarities or genetic and molecular foundations related to neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we examine the transcriptomic and epigenetic profiles of retina and brain microglia...
Khang Ma

RABGAP1 is a sensor that facilitates the sorting and processing of amyloid precursor protein

1 week ago
A hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the accumulation of extracellular amyloid-β plaques in the brain. Amyloid-β is a 40-42 amino acid peptide generated by proteolytic processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP) via membrane-bound proteases. APP is a transmembrane protein, and its trafficking to sites of proteolysis represents a rate-limiting step in AD progression. Although APP processing has been well-studied, its trafficking itinerary and machinery remain incompletely understood. To...
Jessica Eden

Distinct manifestations of excitatory-inhibitory imbalance associated with amyloid-beta and tau in patients with Alzheimer's disease

1 week ago
A growing body of evidence shows that epileptic activity is frequently observed in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), implicating underlying excitatory-inhibitory imbalance. The distinction of whether the AD-epileptic phenotype represents a subset of patients or an underdiagnosed manifestation holds major therapeutic implications. Here, we quantified the excitatory-inhibitory imbalance in AD patients using magnetoencephalography and examined the relationships to AD...
Kamalini G Ranasinghe
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Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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