Alzheimer & Parkinson
Regulation of Lipid Dysmetabolism and Neuroinflammation Progression Linked With Alzheimer's Disease Through Modulation of Dgat2
Alzheimer's disease (AD), an age-associated neurodegenerative disorder, is characterized by progressive cognitive decline, amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation (including soluble oligomers and deposited aggregates), lipid dysregulation, and neuroinflammation. Although mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and accumulation of Aβ42 are established drivers of pathology, the mechanisms connecting oligomeric amyloid toxicity with lipid metabolism and inflammatory responses remain poorly understood....
TYK2 mediates neuroinflammation in Alzheimer's disease brains with TDP-43 pathology
Neuroinflammation is a pathological feature of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease and ALS. Cytoplasmic dsRNA (cdsRNA) triggers a type-I interferon response in human neural cells, leading to their death, and is found in neurons of C9ORF72-ALS patients. Here, we report the spatial coincidence of cdsRNA and pTDP-43 inclusions in human postmortem tissue with Alzheimer's disease pathology, and upregulated interferon response genes in affected regions. CdsRNA also accumulates in a...
Multifunctionality of TIM-3: from immunological aging to pathological progression
The connection between aging and immune dysfunction is uncovering how immunoaging processes contribute to disease. Recent data from Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and adult and pediatric glioblastomas reveal a novel role for TIM3 in brain immune alteration. These findings highlight the role of TIM3 in promoting myeloid cell dysfunction toward an immunosuppressive profile. TIM3-blocking antibody treatments for central nervous system pathologies could be a new therapeutic window for...
Shared genetic and neuroimmune architecture links type 1 diabetes with neurocognitive traits
Type 1 diabetes, particularly with childhood onset, is associated with altered neurocognitive traits, yet the underlying biological mechanisms are unclear. Here, we integrate genome-wide association results with single-cell epigenomic profiles and show that type 1 diabetes heritability is enriched in accessible chromatin of human brain-resident cells, most notably microglia, across neurodevelopment into adulthood. Bonferroni-corrected cross-trait genetic correlation analyses reveal negative...
DeepStrataAge: an interpretable deep-learning clock that reveals stage- and sex-divergent DNA methylation aging dynamics
Aging is the strongest risk factor for chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's, and cancer. DNA methylation (DNAm) clocks offer a promising measure of biological age, but most rely on linear models that miss non-linear dynamics and CpG interactions. To address this, we developed a deep neural network (DNN)-based DNAm clock trained on 29,167 samples profiled on Illumina EPIC v1.0 and v2.0 arrays. Using 12,234 CpGs selected through sex- and age-stratified correlations, our...
Circuit response to neuromodulation characterized with simultaneous deep brain stimulation and precision neuroimaging in humans
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an effective treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD) but its neural mechanisms remain poorly understood. A mechanistic understanding requires precise characterization of functional responses to various stimulation conditions within the same individual. Here we use 3-T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-compatible DBS and precision imaging to collect extensive data from 14 patients with PD who received DBS. Across five timepoints spanning 1 year, each patient...
Reversibility and β-sheet formation are decoupled in tau condensate aging
Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) formed from the protein tau disrupt neuronal function in Alzheimer's disease and are strongly associated with cognitive decline. Early events in tau aggregation are increasingly linked to the formation of biomolecular condensates, which lower the energetic barriers to pathological aggregation by acting as intermediates that transition into insoluble assemblies, a mechanism also implicated in other neurodegenerative diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis...
scTWAS: a powerful statistical framework for single-cell transcriptome-wide association studies
Transcriptome-wide association studies (TWAS) have successfully identified genes associated with complex traits and diseases, but most have been performed using bulk gene expression data, which aggregate signals across heterogeneous cell types. Population-scale single-cell RNA sequencing data now make it possible to perform TWAS at the cell-type resolution, but present unique challenges due to strong noises, technical variations, and high sparsity. Here, we propose scTWAS, a statistical method...
Oligodendrocyte dysfunction in alzheimer's disease: Integrating spatial epigenomics and metabolic circuitry in demyelination - A critical review
Traditional Alzheimer's disease (AD) research has predominantly focused on neuronal pathology within the amyloid-tau-neurodegeneration (ATN) framework, emphasizing β-amyloid (Aβ) plaques, neurofibrillary tangles (NFTS), and neuroinflammation as primary drivers of disease progression. Recently, converging evidence suggests that oligodendrocytes (OLs) and myelin abnormalities are not merely downstream consequences of neuronal injury. Instead, OL dysfunction may emerge early and actively shape...
Translocation of bacteria from the gut to the brain in mice
Recent advances suggest a correlation between gut dysbiosis and neurological diseases, however, relatively little is known about how gut bacteria impact the brain. Here, we reveal that bacteria can translocate directly from the gut to the brain in small numbers when mice are fed an atherogenic, high-fat diet (Paigen diet) that causes alterations in gut microbiome composition and gut barrier permeability. The bacteria were not found in other systemic sites or the blood, but were detected in the...
Cortisol treatment impairs path integration and alters grid-like representations in the male human entorhinal cortex
Acute stress triggers the release of cortisol, which broadly affects cognitive processes. Path integration, a specific navigational process, relies heavily on grid cells in the entorhinal cortex. The entorhinal cortex contains glucocorticoid receptors and is therefore likely to be influenced by cortisol, though little is known about this relationship. Given the role of the entorhinal cortex in neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease, investigating the effects of cortisol on this brain...
Rapid and sensitive detection of cancer-derived small extracellular vesicles using Janus particles
Detecting small extracellular vesicles is critical for understanding disease biology and developing diagnostic tools, yet current methods require lengthy isolation steps and lack sensitivity owing to interference from abundant proteins. Here we report on an assay that uses Janus particles that enable rapid, isolation-free detection by exploiting Brownian rotation-induced blinking changes. When vesicles bind, their size significantly alters the blinking frequency, while smaller proteins produce...
Blood phosphorylated tau elevation as a biomarker in immunoglobulin light chain and transthyretin amyloidosis
Elevated blood levels of phosphorylated tau (p-tau) are diagnostic of Alzheimer disease and are associated with the deposition of amyloid-β in the cerebral neuropil. Elevated p-tau levels have also been associated with cerebral deposition of Danish amyloid and prion protein amyloid. Here we analyzed p-tau in serum from four different cohorts of people with the most common types of systemic amyloidosis, transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis and immunoglobulin light chain (AL) amyloidosis. We found...
Microglia protein profiles in CSF across Alzheimer's disease clinical stages
Microglia are implicated in the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology from its earliest stages, suggesting that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) microglia profiling across clinical AD stages can aid in treatment development and monitoring. We analyzed two CSF cohorts (n = 834) that span from unimpaired controls to preclinical and dementia AD stages, identifying 109 dysregulated microglia-related proteins. Enrichment analyses revealed innate immune processes and cellular recruitment in...
The emergence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in preclinical Alzheimer's disease: An emotion regulation perspective
Preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with distressing neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPSs) that may accelerate progression toward dementia. Existing approaches probe the symptom-level domain-general or domain-specific neural correlates of NPSs. However, the field lacks process-oriented models of symptom emergence for targeted treatment. We propose one pathway for symptom emergence involving the disruption of emotion regulation (ER) systems by early AD pathology. AD pathology in the...
Harmine and its derivatives: A promising multi-target therapeutic avenue for Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder characterized by β-amyloid (Aβ) deposition, tau hyperphosphorylation, neuroinflammation, and cholinergic dysfunction. Currently, no disease-modifying drugs are available, and existing symptomatic treatments offer limited efficacy while posing safety concerns, highlighting the urgent need for multi‑target therapeutic strategies. The natural β‑carboline alkaloid harmine has attracted considerable attention due to its favorable...
Alzheimer's Abeta catalyzes Tau phase separation and aggregation via early nanocluster solubilization
Extracellular amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) composed of hyperphosphorylated Tau are the two main pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Although the co-occurrence and synergistic effects of Aβ and Tau are well established, the mechanisms underlying their interplay in a biomolecular condensate environment remain unclear. Here we show that Aβ40 does not undergo liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) but significantly enhances Tau phase...
Behavioral screening defines the molecular Parkinsonism-related subgroups in Drosophila
Parkinson's disease (PD) and related familial Parkinsonism are defined by motor dysfunction, but the specific upstream molecular causes of these clinical symptoms can vary widely. We hypothesize that these causes converge onto a limited number of core cellular pathways. To investigate this, we created a collection of 24 genetically well-controlled Drosophila models of familial forms of PD and related mono-genic forms of Parkinsonism. Using unbiased behavioral screening and machine learning we...
From cancer to Alzheimer's: could a renewed focus on energy transform biomedicine?
No abstract
Sleep deprivation exhibits an age-dependent effect on infraslow global brain activity
Infraslow (<0.1 Hz) global brain activity, quantified by the global mean blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (gBOLD) signal in resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), is elevated during sleep and coupled to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dynamics, a key pathway for the brain waste clearance implicated in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease. However, the effect of sleep deprivation on gBOLD activity and its interaction with aging remain poorly understood. Using a...
Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
Subscribe to Alzheimer & Parkinson feed