Alzheimer & Parkinson
Selective vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease connects PRKN and differential expression of CHCHD2 and GPNMB
The mechanism(s) causing selective vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson's disease (PD) remain largely elusive. To improve our understanding of mitochondrial involvement and related pathways suggested to play a role in this selective vulnerability, we used tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-mCherry reporter-induced pluripotent stem cells generated by CRISPR/Cas9. We sorted neurons into pure TH-positive and TH-negative neurons upon differentiation into a dopaminergic neuron-containing cell...
Microglial CD31 suppresses Abeta clearance and promotes Alzheimer pathology in 5 FAD mice
Microglia play crucial roles in Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet the molecular mechanisms are unclear. Here, we show that CD31, a recognized endothelial marker, is predominantly expressed in microglia but not in neurons or astrocytes, and it is significantly elevated in the brains of AD patients and mouse models. Microglia-specific CD31 knockdown in 5xFAD mice substantially attenuated the dysregulated transcription networks, suppressed microglia hyperactivation and the disease-associated microglia...
Multimodal neuroimaging-based deep learning framework for pattern analysis and early prediction of neurodegenerative diseases
Neurodegenerative diseases, such as Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's, pose significant challenges due to their progressive nature and late diagnosis. Early detection remains difficult, particularly when using conventional machine learning approaches that fail to capture complex spatial and temporal patterns in multimodal clinical data. Motivated by the need for accurate, scalable, and clinically applicable diagnostic tools, this study proposes a hybrid deep learning framework...
Nasal administration of Protollin enhances monocyte phagocytosis and decreases CD8(+) T cell cytotoxicity in subjects with early Alzheimer's disease: a Phase 1 clinical trial
Protollin, a nasal adjuvant, was evaluated in a randomized double-blind phase 1 study of 16 early Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients to determine safety and to assess its immunomodulatory effects. In a double-blind dose escalation study, subjects received nasal Protollin at doses of 0.1 mg, 0.5 mg, 1.0 mg, and 1.5 mg or placebo twice over a two-week period. Treatment was well-tolerated with minimal side effects. Transcriptomic and single-cell analyses demonstrated that prior to treatment, AD...
The NTR/prodrug revolution: Tools for controlling cell loss and regeneration
Here, we review the history, advancements, and broad utility of the NTR/prodrug system, and suggest future strategies for developing versatile ablation models. As a chemogenetic tool, the nitroreductase (NTR)/prodrug system enables precise spatiotemporal control over cell ablation. The technology leverages bacterial NTR enzymes (e.g. nfsB) to convert inert prodrugs into cytotoxic agents, thereby allowing researchers to induce targeted cell death. Although the NTR/prodrug approach was first...
Beyond replacement: Immature neurons as resilience partners in the aging hippocampus
Whether new neurons contribute to human cognition in old age remains debated. Recently in Cell Stem Cell, Tosoni et al.¹ show that immature-neuron transcriptional programs persist in the aged dentate gyrus and that their molecular state, not simply their abundance, tracks Alzheimer's pathology and cognitive resilience.
Aberrant tau accumulation caused by MAPT mutations induces early pathological changes in axonal transport that are rescued by p38α inhibition
Impairments in axonal transport have been implicated in the pathogenesis of tauopathies, including frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer's disease, yet the underlying mechanisms and reversibility of these deficits are largely unknown. In particular, the impacts of tau mutations, phosphorylation and aggregation on axonal transport in vivo remain controversial. By using two-photon imaging of axonal transport of BDNF granules in the mouse cortex, we reveal that deficits in axonal transport arise in...
Inference of spatial chromatin accessibility via integration of spatial transcriptomics and single-cell multi-omics data
Integrating spatial transcriptomics, which maps gene expression location within tissues, with single-cell multi-omics data, profiling gene expression and chromatin accessibility (or other epigenomic data) for the same cell, offers powerful insights into gene regulation. However, commercially available kits for simultaneous spatial multi-omics profiling are currently unavailable, hindering widespread data generation. Here, we present ISON (Integrated Spatial Omics Network), a unified...
GWAS on short tandem repeats identifies genetic mechanisms in Alzheimer's disease
GWAS typically focus on SNPs, often excluding complex genetic variants, such as short tandem repeats. Here, we report the results of GWAS analyses systematically assessing the role of short tandem repeats, both imputed and directly genotyped by whole genome sequencing, on risk for Alzheimer's disease in a large collection of ~330,000 individuals (3287 cases; 47,048 Alzheimer's disease-by-proxy cases, 283,111 controls) from the UK biobank. Using short tandem repeat genotype data, we identify 15...
Human microglial transitions at the Aβ-tau inflection point associate with divergent pathways to dementia and resilience
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is not an inevitable outcome of pathology but a dynamic process shaped by how brain cells respond to amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau. To disentangle these responses, we combined spatial transcriptomics and single-nucleus RNA sequencing of the superior frontal cortex from octogenarians living with or without dementia and from cognitively intact centenarians with comparable Aβ accumulation. We identified six distinct tissue domains representing a spatial pathological continuum of...
Reticulophagy limits Alzheimer's disease pathology through FAM134B-dependent APP clearance
Selective autophagy maintains organelle and proteome homeostasis through receptor-mediated degradation of damaged membranes and aggregation-prone proteins. Although autophagy dysfunction and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) abnormalities are prominent features of Alzheimer's disease (AD), whether reticulophagy directly contributes to amyloid precursor protein (APP) turnover has remained unclear. We identify FAM134B/RETREG1 as a specific receptor that recognizes ER-localized APP and promotes its...
Targeting mitophagy for neuroprotection: mechanisms and therapeutic opportunities
Mitochondria are essential for neuronal energy production, cellular homeostasis, and overall neuronal function. Due to their high metabolic demands and limited regenerative capacity, neurons are particularly vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction, which leads to ATP depletion, excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and calcium imbalance-ultimately causing oxidative stress, metabolic disruption, and neuronal death. Mitophagy is a selective process that removes damaged mitochondria...
Consensus meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias
To better characterize the genetic architecture underlying Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias (ADRD), we performed a meta-analysis of European-ancestry genome-wide association studies in 128,681 cases or proxy cases of ADRD and 849,833 (proxy) controls. We identified 91 genetic loci associated with ADRD risk, of which 16 are new and 56 are specifically detected in clinically diagnosed AD cases. We also provide a list of 18 loci (15 new) requiring further external validation. A...
Charting the human-specific properties of gene expression networks in the infant prefrontal cortex
Human infancy is characterized by protracted brain development coinciding with sensitive periods of extensive synaptic remodeling. Whether this is supported by human infant-specific transcriptional programs is unknown as comparative material in closely related primate species was unavailable. Here, we analyze rare newborn chimpanzee and age-matched human and rhesus macaque brain samples using single-cell transcriptomics and epigenomics. We identify a human infant-specific transcriptional program...
Exploratory multi-omics analysis for candidate biomarker identification in Parkinson's disease
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder lacking established clinical biomarkers. We performed an exploratory multi‑omics analysis of transcriptome and proteome data from small PD and control cohorts at Huaihe Hospital of Henan University. Using two local datasets, we identified 124 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and 28 proteins, then performed protein‑protein interaction (PPI) and gene set variation analysis (GSVA). After intersecting with 2,964 DEGs from Gene...
Associations between posttraumatic stress and comorbidities of traumatic brain injury and substance use disorders with Alzheimer's disease in older veterans: A narrative review
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) exhibits high rates of comorbidity with Substance Use Disorders (SUDs) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), especially in older adults who are subject to the effects of psychological trauma due to combat exposure, health-related and psychosocial outcomes, and aging. This narrative review explores the associations between PTSD and comorbidities of psychoactive substance abuse and traumatic brain injuries on the incidence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in veterans...
DREAM repressive activity links somatic mutation, lifespan and disease
The DREAM complex has emerged as a central repressor of DNA repair, raising questions as to whether such repression exerts long-term effects on human health. Here we establish that DREAM-associated activity significantly impacts lifetime somatic mutation burden, and that such effects are linked to altered lifespan and age-related disease pathology. First, joint profiling of DREAM-associated activity (quantified from the expression of genes transcriptionally repressed by DREAM) and somatic...
AI-Driven discovery of brain-penetrant mTOR-independent autophagy enhancers for Alzheimer's disease
Current Alzheimer's disease therapies offer limited efficacy and are often accompanied by significant side effects, underscoring the urgent need for new treatment strategies. Enhancing autophagy represents a promising therapeutic approach, yet most known autophagy inducers act through the mTOR-dependent pathway, which broadly affects cellular metabolism and proliferation, and their clinical potential is further limited by poor blood-brain barrier (BBB) penetration. To address these twin...
Physiological brain clearance architecture revealed by neuronal protein tracing
The brain must efficiently clear protein waste to maintain homeostasis, yet physiological drainage pathways remain poorly defined. Standard tracer injection approaches may not reflect endogenous efflux. Here, we develop a non-invasive genetic system to trace neuron-derived protein clearance from the brain to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and border tissues. We identify distinct drainage routes and border hotspots missed by tracer injection, confirmed by bioorthogonal labeling of endogenous neuronal...
Non-decameric NLRP3 reveals a TGN/MTOC-distal pathway of inflammasome activation
The NLRP3 inflammasome contributes to a wide range of conditions from infections to Alzheimer's disease. NLRP3 forms an inactive decameric cage, that upon interaction with the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and microtubule organization center (MTOC), leads to inflammasome activation, yet whether non-decamer NLRP3 species form functional inflammasomes remains unclear. Here, we design a NLRP3 exon 3 deletion variant that forms low molecular weight NLRP3 assemblies. Spatially and dynamically highly...
Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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