Aggregator
Alzheimer's disease pathology degrades an NMDA receptor-dependent spontaneous activity pattern in cortico-hippocampal circuits
Memory-based cognition relies on the integrity of cortico-hippocampal circuits, which are compromised in Alzheimer's disease (AD) as β-amyloid (Aβ) and tau accumulate. However, the mechanisms linking this pathology to circuit dysfunction remain unclear. In mouse models, using in vivo two-photon and Neuropixels recordings, we show that Aβ-tau pathology promotes both region- and layer-specific impairments, involving reduced burst firing in superficial cortical layers and CA1 and reduced mean...
GLP-1 receptor agonist fails to halt Alzheimer's disease
No abstract
Large-scale CSF and plasma proteomics reveal immune, synaptic, and extracellular matrix disruptions across neurodegenerative diseases
Neurodegenerative diseases (NDs), including Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), share overlapping clinical and pathological features. We analyzed cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and plasma proteomes from 2,705 and 3,009 samples, respectively, across these NDs, identifying disease-specific and shared molecular signatures. CSF showed more disease-associated proteins than plasma, with AD and DLB exhibiting the strongest...
Recapitulation of plaque formation, tau pathology, and neurodegeneration in a human 3D matrix model of Alzheimer's disease
This study aims at implementing a 3D cell culture model of Alzheimer's disease (AD). To that end we engineered human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neural stem cells to conditionally overexpress FAD mutant APP and PSEN1 variants. After differentiation in 3D basement membrane matrices, cultures exhibited increased Aβ(42) and Aβ(40) levels and a highly pathogenic shift of the Aβ(42/40) ratio. Typical AD phenotypes such as amyloid deposition and tau pathology were observed alongside...
Characterizing spatiotemporal white matter hyperintensity pathophysiology in vivo to disentangle vascular and neurodegenerative contributions
White matter hyperintensities (WMHs) are neuroimaging markers widely interpreted as caused by cerebral small vessel disease, yet emerging evidence suggests that a subset may have a neurodegenerative etiology. Current imaging methods have lacked the specificity to disentangle biological processes underlying WMHs in vivo. Here, we used voxel-level normative modeling and seven microstructural MRI markers with complementary biophysical sensitivities to generate single-subject high-resolution WMH...
ER-localized ceramide accumulation contributes to replicative senescence
Ceramides regulate diverse cellular processes through compartment-specific accumulation. While mitochondrial ceramide accumulation promotes apoptosis, its regulation and function during senescence remain incompletely understood. Here, we integrate lipidomics, transcriptomics, Raman spectroscopy, and biochemical characterizations to define sphingolipid remodeling in replicative senescence. Senescent cells exhibit elevated ceramide levels and depletion of very-long-chain sphingomyelins, despite...
A senescent tumor cell-derived nanovesicle directly primes splenic T cells to potentiate cancer radiotherapy
Radiotherapy (RT)-induced senescent tumor cells (STCs) reinforce an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (ITM) and compromise therapeutic outcomes. However, current senolytic strategies lack specificity for STCs and often cause off-target toxicity. Here, we observe that STCs possess enhanced antigen-presenting capacity in patient-derived tumor tissues and murine tumor models. Leveraging this phenomenon, we engineer STC-derived nanovesicles (termed nano-APM) for preserving endogenous antigens...
Homoharringtonine exhibits senotherapeutic activity that mitigates diet- and age-associated obesity and insulin resistance and extends lifespan in mice
The accumulation of senescent cells in white adipose tissue (WAT) is closely associated with the functional decline of WAT and plays a causal role in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases. Therefore, the elimination of senescent cells in WAT holds promise for the treatment and prevention of age-related metabolic diseases. Using a drug-repositioning strategy for 2150 clinically applied compounds, we discover that homoharringtonine (HHT), an FDA-approved anti-leukemic drug, manifests...
Multiomic single-cell perturbation screens reveal critical lncRNA regulators of senescence
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) regulate transcriptional and epigenetic programs during aging and senescence. However, no comprehensive studies have systematically integrated multilayered analyses to reveal their diverse regulatory roles. Moreover, lncRNAs with therapeutic potential in age-related diseases remain unexplored. Here we systematically perturbed 32 high-abundance aging- and senescence-associated lncRNAs (PtbAlncs) using a Perturb-seq-based CRISPR-dCas9-KRAB knockdown system coupled...
Subcellular orchestration of microglial aging
No abstract
Cellular and spatial remodeling of aging breast tissue revealed
No abstract
The healthy human global project - Hong Kong: A community-based cross-sectional study of a healthy Asian population
Immune responses vary between individuals due to age, sex, genetics, and environment, yet most systems immunology studies focus on populations of European ancestry. To address this gap, we established the Healthy Human Global Project - Hong Kong (HHGP-HK) to characterize immune variability in a healthy Asian population. Modeled on the French Milieu Intérieur study, we adapted inclusion and exclusion criteria and collected harmonized demographic, medical, and lifestyle data for cross-cohort...
A convergent uPAR-positive tumor ecosystem creates broad vulnerability to CAR T cell therapy
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have transformed hematologic cancer therapy but remain limited in solid tumors by antigen heterogeneity and a suppressive, pro-fibrotic microenvironment. We previously identified the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) as upregulated in senescent, pro-fibrotic cells and showed that uPAR-directed CAR T cells could safely reverse fibrosis in mice. Integrative analyses now reveal that uPAR is broadly expressed in solid tumors enriched for TP53 and...
Simultaneous profiling of native-state proteomes and transcriptomes of neural cell types using proximity labeling
Phenotyping cells at transcriptomic and proteomic levels is an essential step to understanding cellular contributions to development, aging, injury, and disease. Since proteome and transcriptome level abundances modestly correlate, complementary profiling of both is needed. We report a method called simultaneous protein and RNA -omics (SPARO) to capture the cell type-specific transcriptome and proteome simultaneously in vitro using BV2 microglial and HEK293 cell lines and in vivo using...
A deep joint-learning proteomics model for diagnosis of six conditions associated with dementia
Co-pathology is a common feature of neurodegenerative diseases that complicates diagnosis, treatment and clinical management. However, sensitive, specific and scalable biomarkers for in vivo pathological diagnosis are not available for most neurodegenerative neuropathologies. Here we present Proteomics-based Artificial Intelligence for Dementia Diagnosis (ProtAIDe-Dx), a deep joint-learning model on 17,187 patients and controls (age of 70.3 ± 11.5 years, 53.2% female), that uses plasma...
Single-cell spatial atlas of the aging human breast
Breast cancer can develop over a wide age range and tumors in younger women differ from those in older women. Aging alters the spatial context of early tumors and may explain these differences, but breast tissue aging remains poorly characterized. Here, using imaging mass cytometry to profile the spatial expression of 40 proteins, we explore age-related remodeling of normal breast tissues in over 3 million cells from 527 reduction mammoplasties. Aged breast tissue was less cellular and less...
A neuropeptide regulates cell non-autonomous protein homeostasis
The coordination of proteostasis between the brain and peripheral tissues is essential for the health and survival of all animals. In C. elegans, glia coordinate organismal proteostasis and longevity via the unfolded protein response of the endoplasmic reticulum (UPR^(ER)). However, the signaling molecules required remain unknown. Here, we show that glial UPR^(ER) activation increases levels of specific neuropeptides. We identify a single neuropeptide, FLP-17, that is sufficient but not...
Convergence of external and internal stressors on a stress-responsive enhancer of the <em>Sonic hedgehog</em> gene to induce hair disorders
Mammals are constantly exposed to various stressors of internal and external origin. Though hair follicles (HFs) are exquisitely sensitive to stress, it remains largely unknown how stress-induced responses are linked with the intrinsic regulators of HF growth, cycling, and regeneration. Here, we characterize the long-range enhancer of Sonic hedgehog (Shh) gene which encodes a crucial mitogen in the HF, and identify a hair stress-responsive enhancer (HSRE) as a unified target on which various...
Impact of treatment goals on outcomes in critically ill nonagenarians: a retrospective observational study
No abstract
A Cluster of Three snoRNAs Including Jouvence Required in the Gut Determines Lifespan and Confers Neuroprotection Through Metabolic Parameters
In our society, the aging of the population is a major public health concern. Recently we have identified a new snoRNA (jouvence) in Drosophila, and showed that its deletion (F4) reduces lifespan, while its overexpression increases it. F4 deleted flies also present neurodegenerative lesions and a deregulation of metabolic parameters such as triglycerides and sterols. However, a deeper characterization of this genomic locus has revealed the presence of two additional snoRNAs. Here, we have...