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Alzheimer & Parkinson

Cell-type-specific APOE4 cascade across the Alzheimer's disease continuum

1 day 20 hours ago
Apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) is the leading genetic risk factor and an increasingly recognized causal contributor to Alzheimer's disease (AD). AD progresses along a temporal, pathological, and clinical continuum spanning preclinical, prodromal, and dementia stages. Across this continuum, APOE4 exerts detrimental effects at distinct times and in different cell types, underscoring the need for a model defining not only how but also when and in which cells these effects occur. In this review, we...
David Shostak

Extracellular Vesicles as Paradigm Shifters: Transformative Roles in Diagnosis and Therapy for Brain Disorders

1 day 20 hours ago
Extracellular Vesicles (EVs), the nano-sized extracellular membrane-bound vesicles, facilitate cell-to-cell communication by transporting bioactive molecules like proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Their unique cargo, determined by the cell of origin, makes them valuable tools for studying disease pathogenesis and potential drug delivery systems. Research suggests that EVs play a role in the pathogenesis of various diseases, including neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders. They...
Neethu Puthiyattil

Interpretable modality-aware mapping of gene regulation in single-cell multiomics with scMAGCA

1 day 20 hours ago
Single-cell multi-omics technologies profile multiple molecular layers in individual cells, but existing methods often struggle to integrate transcriptomic, proteomic, and epigenomic measurements into an interpretable representation while preserving relationships among cells. Here, we present the single-cell multi-omics adversarial graph convolutional autoencoder (scMAGCA), which constructs cell graphs and uses adversarial alignment to learn interpretable shared embeddings that capture cellular...
Yunhe Wang

Proteomic signatures of the APOE epsilon4 and APOE epsilon2 genetic variants and Alzheimer's disease

1 day 20 hours ago
The APOE locus is the strongest genetic factor for Alzheimer's disease, with ε4 increasing and ε2 decreasing risk, yet the basis of these opposing effects remains unclear. Here we performed a multicohort proteomic analysis across plasma and cerebrospinal fluid in GNPC, BioFINDER-2, ADNI, UK BioBank, and PPMI. APOE-associated protein alterations are detectable before amyloid pathology and remain stable across age and disease progression. APOE2-associated proteins were enriched in pathways related...
Lina Lu

PARP1 deficiency mitigates amyloid pathology, neurodegeneration, and cognitive decline in a familial Alzheimer's disease model

1 day 20 hours ago
Poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR) polymerase 1 (PARP1) has been implicated in DNA damage responses and neuroinflammation in Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet its role in amyloid-beta (Aβ) pathology remains unclear. Here, we show that PARP1 activation drives Aβ pathology and neurodegeneration. Using a sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, we observed significantly elevated PAR levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD compared to controls. In vitro,...
Aanishaa Jhaldiyal

Allele-specific splicing modulates protein isoforms and Alzheimer's risk

2 days 20 hours ago
Despite growing catalogs of genetic variation linked to human traits and diseases, the functional impact of most genetic variants remains poorly understood. Alternative splicing, particularly in the human brain, represents a key layer of post-transcriptional regulation that may mediate genetic effects on gene expression and protein diversity. In this study, we systematically map allele-specific alternative splicing (ASAS) events in postmortem brain tissues from the Mount Sinai Brain Bank cohort,...
Alison J King

Single-nucleus epigenomic dysregulation unmasks genetic risk-associated neurodegenerative glia states

2 days 20 hours ago
The accumulation of abnormal tau protein selectively affects distinct brain regions and specific populations of neurons and glial cells in tau-related dementias, such as Alzheimer's disease, Pick's disease and progressive supranuclear palsy. Although the three disorders share the feature of tau protein pathology, the regulatory circuitry of non-coding genetic variants underlying risk-associated cell states remains to be elucidated. Using paired single-nucleus profiling of chromatin accessibility...
Xia Han

Reduced ULK1 links impaired autophagy and mitophagy to Alzheimer's disease pathology

2 days 20 hours ago
ULK1 (Atg1) initiates macroautophagy and mitophagy, which support neuronal growth and survival, yet how this pathway is disrupted in aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD) remains unclear. Here we report reduced ULK1 in serum and cerebrospinal fluid during aging in cognitively unimpaired participants from the COGNORM study (n = 75) and in patients with AD from the NorCog Memory Clinic Cohort (n = 316). In AD mice, ULK1 overexpression stimulates autophagic flux, reduces AD pathology and delays...
Jun-Ping Pan

Secreted GPNMB enhances uptake of fibrillar alpha-synuclein in a non-cell-autonomous process that can be blocked by anti-GPNMB antibodies

3 days 20 hours ago
Glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma B (GPNMB) is critical to cellular uptake of pathological forms of alpha-synuclein (aSyn), the hallmark disease protein in Parkinson's disease (PD). Here, we demonstrate that the non-membrane-anchored, extracellular domain of GPNMB can function in a non-cell-autonomous manner. In the human brain, GPNMB is widely expressed in neurons and microglia. In induced pluripotent stem cell-derived microglia (iMicroglia), GPNMB expression and secretion increase with...
Marc Carceles-Cordon

A human Staufen1 BAC transgenic mouse exhibits abnormal autophagy and neurodegeneration across the central nervous system

3 days 20 hours ago
RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) play an essential role in development, normal functioning, and human disease. Staufen1 (STAU1) is an RBP that regulates mRNA degradation and subcellular localization, and is part of the ATXN2 protein complex. Previously, we showed that STAU1 is overabundant in patient fibroblasts and in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease (AD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2), where it is associated with impaired autophagic flux due to...
Stefan M Pulst

Brain endothelial cell-derived extracellular vesicles (c-BEEVs) as a promising biomarker for brain vascular pathology and cognitive decline

4 days 20 hours ago
Accurate measurement of brain vascular pathology is essential for understanding its role in cognitive aging. Here we classified participants using the amyloid-tau-neurodegeneration framework in a multicenter cohort and identified cerebrospinal fluid brain endothelial-derived small extracellular vesicles (c-BEEVs) as a sensitive biomarker, which correlated with vascular risk factors and the severity of small-vessel disease. c-BEEVs showed high diagnostic performance for vascular cognitive...
Tongyao You

Advances in modeling memory decline: A critical overview of current animal and human paradigms

5 days 20 hours ago
Memory decline, particularly in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, represents a critical global public health challenge, with projections exceeding 150 million cases by 2050. Current therapeutic options remain limited: while drugs like donepezil and memantine offer symptomatic relief, and newer agents like lecanemab show modest effects on slowing progression, no disease-modifying cures exist. This underscores the urgent need to refine preclinical models bridging discovery...
Yuanzhi Peng

alpha/Sulfonyl-gamma-AApeptide foldamers mitigate Alzheimer's disease pathology by stabilizing transient helical domains in Abeta

5 days 20 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by the accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ), with soluble oligomers widely recognized as key drivers of neurotoxicity through disruption of synaptic function, mitochondrial integrity, and cellular homeostasis. Targeting Aβ aggregation therefore represents a compelling therapeutic strategy. Here we report a synthetic peptidomimetic foldamer, M4, as a potent modulator of Aβ42 aggregation. Biophysical analyses demonstrate that M4 binds Aβ with high affinity,...
Heng Liu

Integrated clinical and computational data-based repurposing of econazole as a novel autophagic activator in ULK1-related Parkinson disease

5 days 20 hours ago
Parkinson disease (PD), the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, is pathologically linked to dysregulated autophagy, a conserved lysosomal degradation pathway. Current conventional PD therapies are often limited by significant side effects, underscoring the demand for alternative treatment strategies. Drug repurposing of FDA-approved compounds represents a promising approach to address this unmet clinical need. Here, by integrating clinical data analysis, we identified an association...
Jin Zhang

Spatiotemporal reconfiguration of functional networks by transcranial magnetic stimulation in Alzheimer's disease

1 week ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with impaired connectivity in critical functional networks. This study investigated the effects of 20 Hz transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) on brain network mechanisms in 25 patients with AD, including 17 in the TMS group and 8 in the sham group. We analyzed resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data, using the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) and fractional ALFF (fALFF) to quantify neural activity and identify regions of...
Miaomiao Guo

Urolithin A: Potential to enhance autophagic clearance and mitigate neuroinflammation in Alzheimer's disease

1 week ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder worldwide and the leading cause of dementia in older adults. The presence of extracellular β-amyloid (Aβ) plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) constitutes the two principal neuropathological features of AD. However, current therapies targeting only Aβ or tau remain suboptimal, likely due to intrinsic neuronal and glial dysfunction in affected brain regions. Urolithin A (UroA) is a widely recognized...
Jiawei Xiang

The mitochondria-synapse axis in Alzheimer's disease: Lost coordination in early stages

1 week ago
Synaptic dysfunction emerges early in Alzheimer's disease, often years before the appearance of clinical symptoms, and is among the most reliable predictors of subsequent cognitive decline. Despite its importance, the cellular events that trigger this early synaptic vulnerability remain poorly defined. Growing evidence points to a critical failure at the interface between neuronal energy metabolism and synaptic signalling, commonly referred to as the mitochondria-synapse axis, suggesting that...
Priyanshu Sharma
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Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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