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Alzheimer & Parkinson

Dual Regulatory Roles of USP10 in Tau Pathology and Neuronal Fate During Alzheimer's Disease Progression

2 weeks 6 days ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by neuronal cell death, brain atrophy, and cognitive decline. Aggregation of Tau protein in neurons is a critical factor in the pathogenesis of AD. Tau aggregates increase as the disease progresses and contribute to neuronal cell death. This study investigated the role of ubiquitin-specific protease 10 (USP10) in Tau pathology and neuronal viability in AD. We found that the expression of USP10 was reduced in the...
Masahiko Takahashi

Cerebral glymphatic system: Structure, regulation, ageing, and mechanisms of encephalopathy

3 weeks ago
The glymphatic system was initially considered as a perivascular channel, responsible for the clearance of substances within the brain. With the deepening comprehension of the functions of the extracellular space (ECS) and the discovery of meningeal lymphatic vessels and subarachnoid lymphatic-like membrane, it is proposed that the glymphatic system should be a complex system encompassing the perivascular space, ECS, and lymphatic-like structures, and it plays crucial roles in the delivery of...
Danrui Zhao

Profiling the Braak progression in Parkinson's disease: a transcriptomics and ML driven identification of progressive biomarker and prognostic ceRNA signature

3 weeks ago
Parkinson's disease (PD), the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disorder, is marked by dopaminergic neuron loss and α-synuclein aggregation. Although Braak staging based on Lewy body pathology stratifies disease progression, clinical variability persists. Identifying stage-specific molecular signatures is essential for developing effective progressive biomarkers. Here, we integrated midbrain transcriptomic data from microarray, bulk RNA-seq, and snRNA-seq platforms. Subsequently, to...
Sudarshan Sarkar

Chaperone-mediated autophagy as a sex-specific modulator of synaptic proteostasis and neural function

3 weeks ago
Chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), once considered a secondary or auxiliary degradation pathway, is now recognized as a central regulator of synaptic proteostasis. A recent study by Khawaja et al. (2025) in Nature Cell Biology provides compelling evidence that CMA actively remodels the synaptic proteome in a sex-specific manner. Using a conditional knockout strategy based on Lamp2a-floxed mice crossed with a Camk2a-Cre driver line to achieve excitatory neuron-specific deletion of Lamp2a in...
Rongcan Luo

CARLIS: covariate-assisted replicability analysis for genome-wide association studies via triplet hidden Markov models

3 weeks 1 day ago
Replicability analysis is a cornerstone for identifying genuine genetic associations in genome-wide association studies (GWAS), yet existing methods are constrained by their failure to account for linkage disequilibrium (LD) structure among single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) or underuse of auxiliary information, limiting their reliability and statistical power. We develop CARLIS, a comprehensive covariate-assisted replicability analysis method to enhance both statistical rigor and biological...
Yan Li

Beyond brain scans: verbal memory testing as an efficient cognitive biomarker for preclinical Alzheimer's disease

3 weeks 1 day ago
Timely and accessible tools for detecting preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD) are essential for early intervention, yet reliance on MRI biomarkers limits scalability. Using longitudinal data from 210 cognitively normal older adults in ADNI, we compared the predictive value of verbal episodic memory, hippocampal volume, and a visuospatial composite. Over a 7-year window, 106 participants progressed to mild cognitive impairment (MCI), while 104 remained stable. At baseline, Immediate Recall on...
Odelia Elkana

Influence of patient characteristics on efficacy and safety of anti-amyloid monoclonal antibodies in Alzheimer's disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis

3 weeks 2 days ago
CONCLUSIONS: The efficacy and safety of anti-amyloid mAbs in AD may differ based on patients' demographic and genetic factors. These findings highlight the potential for personalised treatment strategies and inform national drug policies. Further research is needed to evaluate long-term outcomes and address under-studied patient populations.
Grace H Shim

Neuromodulatory control of energy reserves in dopaminergic neurons

3 weeks 3 days ago
The brain is a metabolically vulnerable organ as neurons have both high resting metabolic rates and the need for local rapid conversion of carbon sources to ATP during activity. Midbrain dopamine neurons are thought to be particularly vulnerable to metabolic perturbations, as a subset of these are the first to undergo degeneration in Parkinson's disease, a neurodegenerative disorder long suspected to be in part driven by deficits in mid-brain bioenergetics. In skeletal muscle, energy homeostasis...
Camila Pulido

A fin-loop-like structure in GPX4 underlies neuroprotection from ferroptosis

3 weeks 3 days ago
Ferroptosis, driven by uncontrolled peroxidation of membrane phospholipids, is distinct from other cell death modalities because it lacks an initiating signal and is surveilled by endogenous antioxidant defenses. Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) is the guardian of ferroptosis, although its membrane-protective function remains poorly understood. Here, structural and functional analyses of a missense mutation in GPX4 (p.R152H), which causes early-onset neurodegeneration, revealed that this variant...
Svenja M Lorenz

Characterizing patterns in causes, risk factors, and life expectancy among the oldest old (aged 95+ years)

3 weeks 3 days ago
CONCLUSION: The 95+-year-old population exhibits distinctive patterns of disease burden that have shifted substantially over the past three decades. Despite cross-national differences, cardiometabolic diseases and risk factors, along with multisystem comorbidities from the brain and kidneys, remain the primary drivers. Integrated strategies addressing biological, social, and environmental factors may enhance intrinsic capacity and promote healthy aging in the oldest old.
Haoxian Tang

No causal links between estradiol and female's brain and mental health using Mendelian randomization

3 weeks 3 days ago
The role of estradiol in depression and Alzheimer's disease - brain disorders that disproportionately affect females - is debated. Results from observational studies are inconsistent and limited by confounding and reverse causation. To overcome these limitations, we perform two-sample Mendelian randomization. We run genome-wide association studies on sex-specific brain age gap, a proxy of brain health, and female-specific estradiol levels using data from the UK Biobank. We test for causal links...
Hannah Oppenheimer

Efficacy of auditory gamma stimulation for cognitive decline: a systematic review of individual and group differences across cognitively impaired and healthy populations

3 weeks 3 days ago
Auditory gamma stimulation is a promising non-invasive neuromodulation technique for cognitive decline, with preclinical studies demonstrating therapeutic effects in Alzheimer's disease models. However, translating these findings into human trials has produced variable outcomes, suggesting a need to examine factors influencing efficacy. In a systematic review of 62 studies on healthy and cognitively impaired populations, we identified 16 characteristics that may affect the response to...
Eve Bolland

Decoding senescent drivers in Alzheimer's disease: From bench to bedside

3 weeks 4 days ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder associated with dementia. Cellular senescence, widely acknowledged as a key hallmark of aging, has increasingly been recognized as a significant factor in the pathogenesis of AD, although the precise mechanisms underlying this relationship have yet to be fully understood. In the brains of individuals with AD, neurons, glial cells, and cerebrovascular endothelial cells exhibit premature senescence, characterized by...
Runjin Zhou

Biological Aging Acceleration in Major Depressive Disorder: A Multi-Omics Analysis

3 weeks 4 days ago
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is linked to a higher risk of premature aging, but the mechanisms underlying this association remain unclear. Using data from two population cohorts (UK Biobank and Finnish Twin Cohort), we evaluate the relationship between systemic and organ-specific proteomic and epigenetic aging acceleration and MDD. A lifetime history of MDD was associated with accelerated proteomic aging at both systemic and organ-specific levels-including the brain-in both cohorts, with...
Breno Satler Diniz

PBX1 Improves Cognition and Reduces Amyloid-β Pathology in APP/PS1 Mice by Transcriptionally Activating the CRTC2-CREB Pathway

3 weeks 4 days ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive cognitive decline, amyloid β (Aβ) deposition, and synaptic dysfunction. However, the mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of PBX1, a transcriptional regulator implicated in neurodevelopment and neuroprotection, against AD. PBX1 expression was significantly downregulated in postmortem hippocampal tissues from patients with AD and in the APP/PS1 mouse...
Zinan Liu

The therapeutic potential of early exercise in Alzheimer's disease: Focus on the brain-spleen axis

3 weeks 5 days ago
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the predominant cause of cognitive dysfunction, with global prevalence increasing annually. AD progression is principally driven by the accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated microtubule-associated protein tau (p-Tau), which trigger a subsequent cascade of neuroinflammatory responses within the central nervous system (CNS). This pathological cascade is regulated by reciprocal CNS-peripheral immune crosstalk. The brain-spleen axis has emerged as a...
Tao Wang

Laminar organization of pyramidal neuron cell types defines distinct CA1 hippocampal subregions

3 weeks 5 days ago
Investigating the cell type organization of hippocampal CA1 is essential for understanding its role in memory and cognition and its susceptibility to neurological disorders like Alzheimer's disease and epilepsy. Multiple studies have identified different organizational principles for gene expression and how it reflects cell types within the CA1 pyramidal layer including gradients or mosaic. Here, we identify sublaminar gene expression patterns within the mouse CA1 pyramidal layer that span...
Maricarmen Pachicano
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Alzheimer and Parkinson: Latest results from PubMed
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