Quadruple Misfolded Proteins in Older Adults

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In this cohort study, Shama Karanth and colleagues from University of Kentucky, Lexington, investigated quadruple misfolded proteins and other proteinopathy combinations in a cohort of 375 deceased individuals with autopsy data in the University of Kentucky Alzheimer Disease Center (UK-ADC).

At least 3 proteinopathies were observed in 50% of brains.

In addition, quadruple misfolded proteins were associated with severe cognitive impairment at least 12 years before death.

Participants with 3 proteinopathies tended to have poorer global cognition earlier than with the presence of only tau and Aβ and were likely to have higher Braak stages.

Previous studies have reported cognitive decline associated with the presence of mixed pathologies, with study to study differences in methods and proteinopathies, the assessment and inclusion of cerebrovascular pathologies, and hippocampal sclerosis. In the present sample, as in other community based cohorts, FTLD in old age was rare (with an estimated incidence of 8.9 of 100 000 in individuals aged 60 to 69 years; no incidence data are available for older age groups) and was not found in brains of individuals who began follow up with normal cognition.

Individuals with FTLD-TDP-43 with data in the UK-ADC Brain Bank were recruited from a dementia clinic. The scientists excluded 6 individuals with FTLD-TDP-43 in the study; none had the quadruple misfolded proteins phenotype. No discernible overlap in any FTLD feature was observed in these individuals other than presence of TDP-43 proteinopathy, which is now detected in many different neurological diseases outside of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis–FTLD spectrum.

Cognitive impairment was associated with quadruple misfolded proteins at autopsy, with 89.1% of participants developing dementia and some experiencing profound impairment up to 12 years before death. This finding suggests that quadruple misfolded proteins occur before end stage Alzheimer disease neuropathological change (ie, before high Braak stage).

Consistent with this hypothesis, the mild cognitive impairment to dementia transition was, on average, fastest in the quadruple misfolded proteins group. Estimation of the group cognitive trajectories was aided by the relatively long followup (mean duration of 10.4 years).

These data provide the basis for a novel hypothesis that quadruple misfolded proteins have a more aggressive phenotype from the early stages of the disease rather than accruing additional pathologies only after Alzheimer disease neuropathological change has progressed to high levels. About 10% of these participants died with normal cognition, and previous research has shown quadruple misfolded proteins were present in persons with apparently normal cognition. In the present study, all individuals with quadruple misfolded proteins who had normal cognition at the last visit before death had lower Braak NFT stages (I to III), had no APOEε4 allele, and were predominantly male (4 of 5 participants).

These individuals may represent an early stage of quadruple misfolded proteins, but there are complexities: clinical presentation of proteinopathy combinations may be cohort specific and depend on other currently unknown factors. Older cohorts that survive into advanced old age, like those in the UK-ADC study, may be more likely to experience multiple proteinopathies than younger cohorts. As previously described, APOE appeared to be associated with multiple proteinopathies in this study, particularly those proteinopathy combinations including Aβ plaques. Carriers of APOEε allele not only had increased odds of tau and Aβ, an expected result, but also had higher odds of tau, Aβ, and αsynuclein; tau, Aβ, and TDP-43; and quadruple misfolded proteins.

Unlike previous studies, this study did not find evidence that the ε4 allele was associated with tau or TDP-43 in the absence of Aβ, but the sample size was relatively small. The temporality of protein misfolding may play a clinically important and differentiating role in disease progression.

Autopsy data, although cross-sectional by nature, are compatible with the hypothesis that Aβ aggregates precede, and perhaps stimulate or exacerbate, the widespread misfolding of tau, TDP-43, and α-synuclein. These results suggest that TDP-43 pathology may be associated with poor global cognition.

The presence of multiple proteinopathies, particularly the quadruple misfolded proteins phenotype, appeared to have been associated with the cognitive decline in deceased individuals who participated in a longitudinal community based study at the UK-ADC.

These observations have potentially significant implications for clinical practice and public health, given that strategies to prevent or manage AD dementia may be complicated by the unrecognized presence of multiple additional neuropathologies.

Two epigenetic regulators interfere with healthy aging

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It has long been assumed that lifespan and health are strongly correlated, but although there has been an overall increase in human life expectancy in recent decades, it is too often accompanied by deterioration of health.

A new study published on February 26 in Nature shows the influence of two epigenetic regulators on aging. Scientists led by Jie Yuan from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai have studied the BAZ-2 and SET-6 proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans worms, which are orthologs of the human proteins BAZ2B and EHMT1.

Through genome-wide RNA-interference-based screening of genes that regulate behavioral deterioration in aging C. elegans, the researchers identified 59 genes as potential health modulators during aging. Essentially the proteins expressed by these genes, read and write epigenetic signals.

Among these modulators, they found that a neuronal epigenetic reader, BAZ-2, and a neuronal histone SET-6, accelerate the deterioration of the behavior of C. elegans by reducing the mitochondrial function, and repressing the expression of the encoded mitochondrial proteins. in the cell nucleus.

The researchers found that the levels of the two proteins increase with age in C. elegans and mice, which in turn attenuates the expression of genes involved in mitochondrial function.

BAZ-2 and SET-6 are complementary epigenetic mechanisms. SET-6 is an "epigenetic writer" and BAZ-2 is an "epigenetic reader" which recognizes modified histones and recruits transcriptional regulators.

Histones are proteins located in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells. They are the main protein components of chromosomes. They are closely associated with DNA and allow their compaction, but they also modify the expression of proteins by various epigenetic mechanisms known as the "histone code".

enter image description here Source Wikipedia.

How do BAZ-2 and SET-6 accelerate aging? The researchers found that the two proteins bind together to the promoter regions of more than 2,000 genes, and decrease their expression via methylation of histones. Among these target genes are many mitochondrial genes encoded nuclear. By suppressing the expression of these genes, BAZ-2 and SET-6 reduce oxygen consumption and ATP production, and decrease the critical stress responses that maintain mitochondrial proteostasis. The resulting metabolic slowdown discourages the worms from assimilating their food and they mate less.

This mechanism is conserved in the neurons of cultured mice and human cells. What about the orthologs of these epigenetic proteins in humans? A review of the databases shows that expression by human orthologs of the two proteins mentioned above, BAZ2B and EHMT1, increases with age and is positively correlated with the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers have verified that ablation of BAZ-2 mouse ortholog Baz2b attenuates age-dependent body weight gain and prevents cognitive decline in aging mice.

enter image description here While wild-type mice grew fat with age, animals lacking both copies of the epigenetic reader Baz2b stayed trim, indicating improved mitochondrial function. [Yuan et al., Nature, 2020.]

However, it must be asked whether BAZ-2 and SET-6 would rather mediate age-related physiological adaptation, rather than the agents of aging itself. Indeed their action could reflect a mechanism of adaptation to a progressively more hostile biological environment.

The scientists here evaluated such association in a cohort of subjects diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment.

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The spread of tau pathology closely correlates with the disease course and cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease. Tau-targeting immunotherapies are being developed to stop the spread of tau pathology and thus halt disease progression. In this post hoc analysis of the ADAMANT clinical trial, the authors examined the performance of AADvac1, an active immunotherapy targeting the microtubule-binding region of tau, in a subgroup of participants with elevated plasma p-tau217, indicating AD-related neuropathological changes.

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The scientists here have used multiple sequencing approaches to sequence the genome of a volunteer from Saudi Arabia.

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Parkinson's Disease is a debilitating neurodegenerative disorder, characterized by motor and cognitive impairments, that affects >1% of the population over the age of 60. The pathogenesis of Parkinson disease is complex and remains largely unknown. Due to the cellular heterogeneity of the human brain and changes in cell type composition with disease progression, this complexity cannot be fully captured with bulk tissue studies. To address this, the authors generated single-nucleus RNA sequencing and whole-genome sequencing data from 100 postmortem cases and controls, carefully selected to represent the entire spectrum of Parkinson disease neuropathological severity and diverse clinical symptoms. The single nucleus data were generated from five brain regions, capturing the subcortical and cortical spread of Parkinson disease pathology. Rigorous preprocessing and quality control were applied to ensure data reliability. Committed to collaborative research and open science, this dataset is available on the AMP Parkinson disease Knowledge Platform, offering researchers a valuable tool to explore the molecular bases of Parkinson disease and accelerate advances in understanding and treating the disease.

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The scientists here applied cortical gradients mapping to resting-state functional MRI data of patients with frontotemporal dementia and healthy controls. In healthy controls, the principal gradient maximally distinguished sensorimotor from default-mode network and the secondary gradient visual from salience network. The secondary gradient, however, showed widespread disruptions impacting the interactions among all networks specifically in bvFTD, while semantic and non-fluent variants exhibited more focal alterations in limbic and sensorimotor networks. These specific cortical gradients' fingerprints could serve as a functional signature for identifying early changes in neurodegenerative diseases or potential compensatory processes.

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