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Alzheimer & Parkinson

A small molecule reduces both parkinsonism and l-dopa-induced dyskinesia in animal models of Parkinson's disease

22 hours 20 minutes ago
Maximizing clinical benefits of therapeutics while minimizing adverse effects is a central challenge in drug development. For Parkinson's disease (PD), l-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (l-dopa) is the most effective treatment available, but chronic use is associated with periods of reduced efficacy (motor fluctuations) and the debilitating on-target side effect of l-dopa-induced dyskinesia. To disentangle the molecular mechanisms underlying l-dopa's antiparkinsonian effects versus its dyskinetic...
Aarash Bordbar

Functional segregation in Parkinson's disease

22 hours 20 minutes ago
The basal ganglia are characterized by somatotopic representation and are organized in parallel, functionally segregated corticostriatal circuits, but the impact of Parkinson's disease (PD) on this architecture is unknown. We mapped task-evoked dopamine release using [^(11)C]raclopride positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance in 13 early PD and 15 healthy control (HC) subjects during the performance of motor, cognitive, and reward tasks. In PD, motor tasks elicited decreased relative...
Dongning Su

Modulation of Inflammasome Biology in Age-Associated Neurodegenerative Diseases: Therapeutic Potential of Endogenous Gasotransmitters and Synthetic Molecules

1 day 22 hours ago
Inflammasomes, particularly the NLRP3 complex, play a central role in coordinating innate immune activation and neuroinflammatory responses within the cytosol. Persistent or dysregulated nucleotide-binding domain, leucine-rich-containing family, pyrin domain-containing-3 (NLRP3) activation promotes caspase-1-dependent maturation of interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18 and triggers gasdermin D (GSDMD)-mediated pyroptosis, thereby contributing to the pathogenic cascades underlying Alzheimer's disease...
Arshi Waseem

Spatiotemporal dynamics of tau extent and load increase in Alzheimer's disease across four longitudinal cohorts

1 day 22 hours ago
This longitudinal study including four independent cohorts assessed the spatiotemporal dynamics of tau extent and load changes in Alzheimer's disease using tau positron emission tomography data from 2,459 participants, including 898 followed for up to 7 years. Regional standardized uptake value ratios indexed tau load, whereas the spatial extent of tauopathy (SEOT) (proportion of abnormal voxels) measured tau extent. We observed burden-dependent longitudinal dynamics of tau progression: SEOT...
Arthur C Macedo

Targeted α-synuclein mRNA degradation by PMO-based RNA-degrading chimeras

1 day 22 hours ago
α-Synucleinopathies are devastating neurodegenerative diseases characterized by pathological accumulation of a neuronal protein, α-synuclein (αSyn). Lowering soluble αSyn levels is a promising therapeutic strategy to limit aggregation and neurotoxicity, but directly targeting this protein is hindered by its intrinsically disordered structure and other factors, such as its conformational heterogeneity and intracellular drug delivery barriers. Consequently, increasing attention has been directed...
Ning Wang

3D nanoscale imaging of amyloid-β oligomer interactions with extracellular vesicles by cryo-ET

1 day 22 hours ago
Central to Alzheimer's disease pathology are prefibrillar oligomer assemblies of amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide. A widely discussed hypothesis proposes that amyloid-β oligomers insert into neuronal lipid membranes, disrupting their integrity and causing a loss of cellular homeostasis in Alzheimer's disease. This membrane disruption is believed to be a major source of Aβ-induced neurotoxicity. Cryo electron tomography (cryo-ET) has facilitated 3D nanoscale imaging of Aβ-membrane interactions under...
Anum Khursheed

Dopaminergic neurons preferentially accumulate mtDNA rearrangements

1 day 22 hours ago
High levels of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions have been described in the substantia nigra. However, the mechanisms involved are poorly understood. We found that transient expression of a mitochondrial targeted restriction endonuclease (mitoPstI) in mice leads to an accumulation of mtDNA rearrangements that involve both the PstI cleavage sites and unrelated specific regions of the mtDNA, including the MTERF1 binding site and the edge of the D-loop. This pattern of rearrangements after...
Tania Arguello

Repurposing trazodone for Alzheimer's disease to modulate soluble ST2 levels and alleviate Alzheimer's pathology

1 day 22 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a multifactorial disorder involving various pathological mechanisms, such as amyloidosis, immune dysfunctions, and synaptic impairments, which are important therapeutic targets. Repurposing drugs to target these mechanisms offers a promising approach to reduce the costs and duration of drug development. Genetic studies underscore the critical role of microglial clearance of amyloid-beta (Aβ) in AD pathogenesis. Specifically, soluble ST2 (sST2)-one of the two major...
Daniel Y K Wong

CIT-Lasso: a scalable approach beyond guilty by association for identifying causal variants from genome-wide summary statistics

1 day 22 hours ago
We present CIT-Lasso, a framework that uses only summary statistics to identify, genome-wide, sets of variants carrying non-redundant information on a phenotype, distinguishing likely causal variants from correlated variants that are merely associated. The open-source implementation completes genome-wide analysis in under 15 min on one CPU. In simulations, it outperforms existing methods in false discovery rate control, power, and fine-mapping resolution. Applied to an Alzheimer's disease...
Zihuai He

Medial entorhinal-hippocampal desynchronization parallels the emergence of memory impairment in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease pathology

2 days 22 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive impairments in episodic and spatial memory, as well as circuit and network-level dysfunction. While functional impairments in medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) and hippocampus (HPC) have been observed in patients and rodent models of AD, it remains unclear how communication between these regions breaks down in disease, and what specific physiological changes are associated with the onset of memory impairment. Here,...
Lauren M Vetere

Multidomain lifestyle intervention for the prevention of cognitive decline in at-risk older adults in Latin America (LatAm-FINGERS): a single-blind, multicentre, randomised controlled trial

2 days 22 hours ago
BACKGROUND: Latin America faces a high dementia burden, with increased prevalence of factors associated with cognitive decline. Multidomain lifestyle interventions might delay cognitive decline, but populations from Latin America remain under-represented in dementia prevention trials. We aimed to investigate the feasibility of a culturally adapted, multidomain, systematic lifestyle intervention and investigate its effects on global cognitive function in at-risk older adults (aged 60-77 years).
Lucia Crivelli

Astrocytic lipid dysregulation as an early driver of neurodegeneration

2 days 22 hours ago
Astrocytes have traditionally been cast as supportive glia, but they are increasingly recognized as metabolic hubs that regulate cholesterol synthesis, fatty acid detoxification, lipid droplet dynamics and redox homeostasis in the CNS. Neurons have a limited intrinsic capacity for lipid storage and detoxification and rely heavily on astrocytes to maintain a safe lipid environment. Emerging evidence indicates that dysregulation of astrocytic lipid homeostasis precedes overt neuronal degeneration...
Woojin Scott Kim

CAPNS1 restoration partially alleviates mitochondrial dysfunction and synaptic deficits in Alzheimer's disease through the Ca2+-CaMKIIbeta-MAPK-PGC-1alpha axis

4 days 22 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by brain atrophy and cognitive decline. While the amyloid cascade hypothesis remains the dominant framework, accumulating evidence indicates that mitochondrial dysfunction critically contributes to AD progression. Although improving mitochondrial function has been shown to rescue cognitive deficits in AD models, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain elusive. In this study, we identified a significant reduction...
Jialin Han

Evolutionary history of LRRK2 and PRKN in leprosy and Parkinson's disease

4 days 22 hours ago
LRRK2 (leucine-rich repeat kinase 2) and Parkin (PRKN) act in shared pathways and are implicated in Parkinson's disease (PD), leprosy, and other diseases. While leprosy likely imposed strong evolutionary pressure, PD's relatively late onset renders it largely invisible to natural selection. We examined the evolutionary history of LRRK2 and PRKN in primates and human populations and found evidence of positive selection on both genes, alongside strong constraint at LRRK2 disease-associated sites....
Rachele Cagliani

Modeling Parkinson's pathology in human iPSC dopaminergic neurons uncovers key mechanisms of Lewy body formation and heterogeneity

5 days 22 hours ago
The aggregation of alpha-synuclein (aSyn) into intraneuronal inclusions of heterogeneous morphology, known as Lewy bodies (LBs), is a defining hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD); yet, our understanding of the mechanisms underpinning their formation and heterogeneity remains incomplete. Here, we present a human isogenic induced pluripotent stem cell-derived dopaminergic neuron (iDA) model that faithfully recapitulates the diverse biochemical, morphological, and ultrastructural features of LB...
Anne-Laure Mahul-Mellier

Transcriptomic Evidence of Mitochondrial Double-Stranded RNA Accumulation in Brain Aging and Alzheimer's Disease

5 days 22 hours ago
Mitochondria and inflammation are tightly linked in aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD), and recent evidence implicates mitochondrial double-stranded RNA (mt-dsRNA) as a potential trigger of inflammation. We examined mt-dsRNA accumulation and dsRNA signaling in brain aging and AD using complementary human brain tissue and in vitro transcriptomic datasets by quantifying mitochondrial transcripts, dsRNA editing, and related gene expression patterns. We found that mt-dsRNA signatures increased after...
Rachel L Doser

Recent advances in Alzheimer's disease: From molecular mechanisms to therapeutic strategies

6 days 22 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) remains the leading cause of dementia worldwide and an escalating global health crisis. The hallmark amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) are now known to be accompanied by a complex array of pathologies that culminate in neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. New disease-modifying therapies for AD can now slow cognitive decline through the removal of amyloid plaques from the brain, but treatments to stop or prevent cognitive impairment remain elusive. In...
Michelle D Rudman

Human embryonic stem cell-derived dopaminergic cells for Parkinson's disease: a phase 1/2 open-label trial

6 days 22 hours ago
Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by progressive loss of nigral dopaminergic neurons, resulting in disabling motor symptoms. Intracerebral transplantation of stem cell-derived dopaminergic progenitors to replace lost endogenous dopaminergic neurons offers a new potentially restorative therapeutic approach for PD. Here we report the 12-month primary safety end point and interim efficacy outcomes from a phase 1/2, open-label, multicenter trial evaluating STEM-PD, a cryopreserved,...
G Paul

NicheTrans: spatial-aware cross-omics translation

6 days 22 hours ago
While spatial multiomics offers insights into complex biological systems, its widespread adoption is hindered by technical challenges, specialized requirements and limited accessibility. Here we present NicheTrans, a spatially aware cross-omics translation method and a flexible Transformer-based multimodal framework. Unlike existing single-cell translation methods, NicheTrans incorporates both cellular microenvironment information and multimodal data. We validated the advantage of NicheTrans...
Zhikang Wang

C1q and immunoglobulins mediate activity-dependent synapse loss in the adult brain

6 days 22 hours ago
Complement component 1q (C1q), the initiator of the classical complement cascade, mediates synaptic elimination in development and disease, yet the triggers for its deposition on synapses remain unclear. Using in vivo chemogenetics, we demonstrate that neuronal hyperactivity induces region-specific, C1q-dependent synapse loss in the adult hippocampus. Suppressing perforant pathway hyperactivity in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease reduced local amyloid-β amounts and C1q deposition and...
Gerard Crowley
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5 hours 42 minutes ago
Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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