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Alzheimer & Parkinson

Evaluating Senescence-Targeted Approaches in Alzheimer's Disease: What We Know and What Lies Ahead

1 day 16 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive and irreversible neurodegenerative disease, which represents the most prevalent dementia worldwide. Although amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau pathology have been the classic focus of treatment, accumulating evidence indicates that ageing-associated cellular senescence plays a central role in AD pathogenesis. Senescent neurons, astrocytes, microglia and endothelial cells accumulate in the ageing and Alzheimer's brain and adopt a senescence-associated secretory...
Pratik Prashant Doshi

Cell type-specific gene regulatory atlas prioritizes drug targets and repurposable medicines in Alzheimer's disease

1 day 16 hours ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a complex and poorly understood neurodegenerative disorder that lacks sufficiently effective treatments. Computational and integrative analyses that leverage multiomics data provide a promising strategy to uncover disease mechanisms and identify therapeutic opportunities. Here, we develop a cell type-specific regulatory atlas of the human middle temporal gyrus via leveraging single-nucleus RNA-seq (1,197,032 nuclei) and ATAC-seq (740,875 nuclei) datasets from 84...
Yunxiao Ren

DNA nanodevices detect an acidic nanolayer on the lysosomal surface

1 day 16 hours ago
Lysosomes maintain a highly acidic lumen to regulate H^(+)-dependent hydrolase-mediated degradation, but how protons are 'leaked' out to regulate organellar functions through cytosolic effectors remains unknown. Here we developed DNA nanodevices on the cytosolic leaflet of lysosomal membranes to monitor juxta-organellar pH in cells. Unexpectedly, we revealed a radiating acidic layer (up to 21 nm in thickness) on the outer surface of all lysosomes, typically 0.2-0.7 pH units more acidic than the...
Yutong Zhang

Healing of ischemic injury in the retina

1 day 16 hours ago
Neuro- and retinal degenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, stroke, age-related macular degeneration, and central retinal artery occlusion, rob millions of their independence. Studying these diseases in human retinas has been hindered by the rapid loss of neuronal activity after death. While some CNS activity has been restored postmortem, synchronized neuronal transmission beyond 30 min has remained elusive. We overcome this barrier by reviving and sustaining light signal transmission in...
Silke Becker

Enhancing link prediction in biomedical knowledge graphs with BioPathNet

2 days 16 hours ago
Understanding complex interactions in biomedical networks is crucial for advancements in biomedicine, but traditional link prediction (LP) methods are limited in capturing this complexity. We present BioPathNet, a graph neural network framework based on the neural Bellman-Ford network (NBFNet), addressing limitations of traditional representation-based learning methods through path-based reasoning for LP in biomedical knowledge graphs. Unlike node-embedding frameworks, BioPathNet learns...
Emy Yue Hu

Glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase exacerbates α-synuclein-induced toxicity by increasing lipid peroxidation

3 days 16 hours ago
Although multiple cellular pathways have been implicated in α-Synuclein (α-syn)-associated Parkinson's disease (PD), the role of lipid metabolism remains elusive. In this study, we identify Drosophila mino, which encodes the mitochondrial isoform of the lipid synthesis enzyme glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase (GPAT), as a potent modifier of α-syn. Silencing the expression of mino significantly suppresses α-syn-induced PD phenotypes in Drosophila, including dopaminergic neuronal loss and...
Mengda Ren

C1q-dependent clearance of alpha-synuclein allows macrophages to transiently limit enteric synucleinopathy in male mice

3 days 16 hours ago
Deposition of misfolded α-synuclein (αsyn) in the enteric nervous system (ENS) is found in multiple neurodegenerative diseases. It is hypothesized that ENS synucleinopathy contributes to both the pathogenesis and non-motor morbidity in Parkinson's Disease (PD), but the cellular and molecular mechanisms that shape enteric histopathology and dysfunction are poorly understood. Here, we employ a fibrillar injection model of enteric synucleinopathy in male mice and demonstrate that ENS-resident...
Phillip M Mackie

Stuxnet balances mitochondria homeostasis by regulating uhg5 and parkin

4 days 16 hours ago
Emerging evidence implicates the Stuxnet (Stx) protein in human disease, extending beyond its known role in proteasome-independent degradation. Exploring this further, our investigation into stx downstream targets in Drosophila reveals that loss of the U snoRNA host gene 5 (Uhg5) gene disrupts sleep. This sleep phenotype is linked to inefficient translation of mitochondrial genes, as Uhg5 produces small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) that directly regulate mitochondrial transcripts. Using GoldCLIP...
Xianguo Zhao

Decoding synaptic imbalance in neurodegenerative diseases: From pathological analysis to targeted intervention

4 days 16 hours ago
Synapses serve as the central functional components mediating information transmission, integration, and storage within the central nervous system (CNS). Their functionality depends on the synergistic interplay of the presynaptic membrane, synaptic cleft, and postsynaptic membrane-three structures that collectively sustain neurotransmitter secretion, postsynaptic signaling, and synaptic plasticity. Of note, synaptic impairment represents an early, shared pathological hallmark across aging and...
Xiong Li

Robust characterization and interpretation of rare pathogenic cell populations from spatial omics using GARDEN

5 days 16 hours ago
Spatial omics links molecular measurements to their positions in tissue, revealing cellular organization and interactions. Yet most computational tools highlight common cell types and overlook rare populations that can drive disease. Here we show GARDEN, a computational framework that identifies and characterizes these pathogenic cells or regions in spatial omics by embedding graph-based dynamic attention into a spatially-aware graph fusion contrastive model. GARDEN works consistently across...
Xinming Zhang

The interplay between autophagy and unconventional secretion in neurodegeneration

6 days 16 hours ago
Within neurons, the misfolding and aggregation of certain proteins has been identified as a common feature of many late-onset neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). These aggregate-prone proteins include tau (in both primary tauopathies and in Alzheimer's disease) and alpha-synuclein in Parkinson's disease. There is strong experimental evidence that the upregulation of intracellular clearance pathways (autophagy and ubiquitin-proteasome pathways) can clear aggregate-prone proteins in experimental...
Maurizio Renna

Nanotechnology-based advancements in Parkinson's therapy: Exploring animal models and clinical insights in neurodegenerative disorders

6 days 16 hours ago
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic neurological disorder characterized by loss of body movement control due to dopamine abnormalities. PD leads to various pathological symptoms, including muscle stiffness, bradykinesia, tremors, and postural disturbances. As a severe disease, PD caused approximately 329,000 deaths worldwide in 2019. However, PD treatment is very challenging; thus, alternative therapeutic strategies are in high demand. The primary therapeutic hurdle in PD therapy is the...
Dnyandev G Gadhave

Omega-3 supplementation prevents functional and neural respiratory damage present in an animal model of Parkinson's disease

6 days 16 hours ago
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder primarily characterized by the progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, leading to classical motor symptoms such as tremors, rigidity, and bradykinesia. In later stages, patients frequently develop non-classical symptoms, including respiratory dysfunctions, which may result from neurodegeneration in brainstem regions involved in respiratory control, such as the pre-Bötzinger Complex (preBötC) and the retrotrapezoid...
Taina O Macedo

Inactive ryanodine receptors sustain lysosomal availability for autophagy by promoting ER-lysosomal contact site formation

1 week ago
Lysosomal and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca^(2+) release mutually influence each other's functions. Recent work revealed that ER-located ryanodine receptor(s) (RyR(s)) Ca^(2+) release channels suppress autophagosome turnover by the lysosomes. In familial Alzheimer's disease, inhibiting RyR hyperactivity restored autophagic flux by normalizing lysosomal vacuolar H^(+)-ATPase (vATPase) levels. However, the mechanisms by which RyRs control lysosomal function and how this involves the vATPase remain...
Tim Vervliet

Trained immunity in acute and chronic neurological diseases

1 week ago
Trained immunity, the long-term reprogramming of innate immune cells to elicit an enhanced response upon subsequent challenges, has become a key concept in understanding a wide range of pathologies, including both acute and chronic inflammatory disorders. Recent evidence suggests that trained immunity also plays a significant role in the development and progression of various neurological disorders and related comorbidities, in which brain pathology can lead to trained immunity. This review...
Sijia Zhang

Altered hepatic metabolism in Down syndrome

1 week ago
Trisomy 21 (T21) gives rise to Down syndrome (DS), the most commonly occurring chromosomal abnormality in humans. T21 affects nearly every organ and tissue system in the body, predisposing individuals with DS to congenital heart defects, autoimmunity, and Alzheimer's disease, among other co-occurring conditions. Here, using multi-omic analysis of plasma from more than 400 people, we report broad metabolic changes in the population with DS typified by increased bile acid levels and protein...
Lauren N Dunn

Zombosomes are anucleated cell couriers that spread α-synuclein pathology

1 week ago
Astrocytes not only play a central role in orchestrating the brain's microenvironment but also are tightly connected to neurodegenerative processes. Hence, unraveling astrocytes' intercellular pathways can give important insight into disease-spreading mechanisms. Here, we describe a distinct form of actively migrating cellular vehicles, which we have named zombosomes. Zombosomes shed from astrocytes but retain their adhesive and motile properties, even though they lack nuclei. They share protein...
Abdulkhalek Dakhel

Proton-selective conductance and gating of the lysosomal cation channel TMEM175

1 week 1 day ago
The lysosomal cation channel TMEM175 plays a key role in luminal pH homeostasis and lysosome function, with aberrant activity linked to Parkinson's disease. Although initially described as a K^(+)-selective channel, TMEM175 exhibits substantial H^(+) permeability. Here, we dissect complex changes affecting human TMEM175 conductance and ionic properties of TMEM175-mediated current in response to pH shifts on the luminal side of the protein. A drop in pH from 7.4 to 4.7 on the side equivalent to...
Tobias Schulze
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Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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