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1.
Acta Neuropathol ; 147(1): 65, 2024 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557897

Human microglia are critically involved in Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression, as shown by genetic and molecular studies. However, their role in tau pathology progression in human brain has not been well described. Here, we characterized 32 human donors along progression of AD pathology, both in time-from early to late pathology-and in space-from entorhinal cortex (EC), inferior temporal gyrus (ITG), prefrontal cortex (PFC) to visual cortex (V2 and V1)-with biochemistry, immunohistochemistry, and single nuclei-RNA-sequencing, profiling a total of 337,512 brain myeloid cells, including microglia. While the majority of microglia are similar across brain regions, we identified a specific subset unique to EC which may contribute to the early tau pathology present in this region. We calculated conversion of microglia subtypes to diseased states and compared conversion patterns to those from AD animal models. Targeting genes implicated in this conversion, or their upstream/downstream pathways, could halt gene programs initiated by early tau progression. We used expression patterns of early tau progression to identify genes whose expression is reversed along spreading of spatial tau pathology (EC > ITG > PFC > V2 > V1) and identified their potential involvement in microglia subtype conversion to a diseased state. This study provides a data resource that builds on our knowledge of myeloid cell contribution to AD by defining the heterogeneity of microglia and brain macrophages during both temporal and regional pathology aspects of AD progression at an unprecedented resolution.


Alzheimer Disease , Animals , Humans , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , tau Proteins/genetics , tau Proteins/metabolism , Transcriptome , Brain/pathology , Myeloid Cells/pathology , Microglia/pathology , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism
2.
Eur J Pharmacol ; 934: 175301, 2022 Nov 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36191631

In this study we aimed to reduce tau pathology, a hallmark of Alzheimer's Disease (AD), by activating mTOR-dependent autophagy in a transgenic mouse model of tauopathy by long-term dosing of animals with mTOR-inhibitors. Rapamycin treatment reduced the burden of hyperphosphorylated and aggregated pathological tau in the cerebral cortex only when applied to young mice, prior to the emergence of pathology. Conversely, PQR530 which exhibits better brain exposure and superior pharmacokinetic properties, reduced tau pathology even when the treatment started after the onset of pathology. Our results show that dosing animals twice per week with PQR530 resulted in intermittent, rather than sustained target engagement. Nevertheless, this pulse-like mTOR inhibition followed by longer intervals of re-activation was sufficient to reduce tau pathology in the cerebral cortex in P301S tau transgenic mice. This suggests that balanced therapeutic dosing of blood-brain-barrier permeable mTOR-inhibitors can result in a disease-modifying effect in AD and at the same time prevents toxic side effects due to prolonged over activation of autophagy.


Alzheimer Disease , Animals , Mice , Alzheimer Disease/drug therapy , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , tau Proteins/metabolism , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Mice, Transgenic , Brain , Sirolimus/pharmacology , Disease Models, Animal
3.
Commun Biol ; 4(1): 1018, 2021 08 31.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34465863

Dioecious species are a hallmark of the animal kingdom, with opposing sexes responding differently to identical sensory cues. Here, we study the response of C. elegans to the small-molecule pheromone, ascr#8, which elicits opposing behavioral valences in each sex. We identify a novel neuropeptide-neuropeptide receptor (NP/NPR) module that is active in males, but not in hermaphrodites. Using a novel paradigm of neuropeptide rescue that we established, we leverage bacterial expression of individual peptides to rescue the sex-specific response to ascr#8. Concurrent biochemical studies confirmed individual FLP-3 peptides differentially activate two divergent receptors, NPR-10 and FRPR-16. Interestingly, the two of the peptides that rescued behavior in our feeding paradigm are related through a conserved threonine, suggesting that a specific NP/NPR combination sets a male state, driving the correct behavioral valence of the ascr#8 response. Receptor expression within pre-motor neurons reveals novel coordination of male-specific and core locomotory circuitries.


Caenorhabditis elegans/physiology , Hermaphroditic Organisms/physiology , Locomotion , Receptors, Neuropeptide/genetics , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins , Carrier Proteins , Hermaphroditic Organisms/genetics , Locomotion/drug effects , Male , Receptors, Neuropeptide/metabolism
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