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Browsing by Author "Brase, Logan"
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Item Meningeal lymphatics affect microglia responses and anti-Aβ immunotherapy(Springer Nature, 2021) Da Mesquita, Sandro; Papadopoulos, Zachary; Dykstra, Taitea; Brase, Logan; Farias, Fabiana Geraldo; Wall, Morgan; Jiang, Hong; Kodira, Chinnappa Dilip; de Lima, Kalil Alves; Herz, Jasmin; Louveau, Antoine; Goldman, Dylan H.; Salvador, Andrea Francesca; Onengut-Gumuscu, Suna; Farber, Emily; Dabhi, Nisha; Kennedy, Tatiana; Milam, Mary Grace; Baker, Wendy; Smirnov, Igor; Rich, Stephen S.; Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network; Benitez, Bruno A.; Karch, Celeste M.; Perrin, Richard J.; Farlow, Martin; Chhatwal, Jasmeer P.; Holtzman, David M.; Cruchaga, Carlos; Harari, Oscar; Kipnis, Jonathan; Neurology, School of MedicineAlzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent cause of dementia1. Although there is no effective treatment for AD, passive immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies against amyloid beta (Aβ) is a promising therapeutic strategy2,3. Meningeal lymphatic drainage has an important role in the accumulation of Aβ in the brain4, but it is not known whether modulation of meningeal lymphatic function can influence the outcome of immunotherapy in AD. Here we show that ablation of meningeal lymphatic vessels in 5xFAD mice (a mouse model of amyloid deposition that expresses five mutations found in familial AD) worsened the outcome of mice treated with anti-Aβ passive immunotherapy by exacerbating the deposition of Aβ, microgliosis, neurovascular dysfunction, and behavioural deficits. By contrast, therapeutic delivery of vascular endothelial growth factor C improved clearance of Aβ by monoclonal antibodies. Notably, there was a substantial overlap between the gene signature of microglia from 5xFAD mice with impaired meningeal lymphatic function and the transcriptional profile of activated microglia from the brains of individuals with AD. Overall, our data demonstrate that impaired meningeal lymphatic drainage exacerbates the microglial inflammatory response in AD and that enhancement of meningeal lymphatic function combined with immunotherapies could lead to better clinical outcomes.Item Single-nucleus RNA-sequencing of autosomal dominant Alzheimer disease and risk variant carriers(Springer Nature, 2023-04-21) Brase, Logan; You, Shih-Feng; D'Oliveira Albanus, Ricardo; Del-Aguila, Jorge L.; Dai, Yaoyi; Novotny, Brenna C.; Soriano-Tarraga, Carolina; Dykstra, Taitea; Fernandez, Maria Victoria; Budde, John P.; Bergmann, Kristy; Morris, John C.; Bateman, Randall J.; Perrin, Richard J.; McDade, Eric; Xiong, Chengjie; Goate, Alison M.; Farlow, Martin; Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network (DIAN); Sutherland, Greg T.; Kipnis, Jonathan; Karch, Celeste M.; Benitez, Bruno A.; Harari, Oscar; Neurology, School of MedicineGenetic studies of Alzheimer disease (AD) have prioritized variants in genes related to the amyloid cascade, lipid metabolism, and neuroimmune modulation. However, the cell-specific effect of variants in these genes is not fully understood. Here, we perform single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) on nearly 300,000 nuclei from the parietal cortex of AD autosomal dominant (APP and PSEN1) and risk-modifying variant (APOE, TREM2 and MS4A) carriers. Within individual cell types, we capture genes commonly dysregulated across variant groups. However, specific transcriptional states are more prevalent within variant carriers. TREM2 oligodendrocytes show a dysregulated autophagy-lysosomal pathway, MS4A microglia have dysregulated complement cascade genes, and APOEε4 inhibitory neurons display signs of ferroptosis. All cell types have enriched states in autosomal dominant carriers. We leverage differential expression and single-nucleus ATAC-seq to map GWAS signals to effector cell types including the NCK2 signal to neurons in addition to the initially proposed microglia. Overall, our results provide insights into the transcriptional diversity resulting from AD genetic architecture and cellular heterogeneity. The data can be explored on the online browser (http://web.hararilab.org/SNARE/).