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Nat Commun
Published

A single nuclear transcriptomic characterisation of mechanisms responsible for impaired angiogenesis and blood-brain barrier function in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors

Stergios Tsartsalis, Hannah Sleven, Nurun Fancy, Frank Wessely, Amy M Smith, Nanet Willumsen, To Ka Dorcas Cheung, Michal J Rokicki, Vicky Chau, Eseoghene Ifie, Combiz Khozoie, Olaf Ansorge, Xin Yang, Marion H Jenkyns, Karen Davey, Aisling McGarry, Robert C J Muirhead, Stephanie Debette, Johanna S Jackson, Axel Montagne, David R Owen, J Scott Miners, Seth Love, Caleb Webber, M Zameel Cader, Paul M Matthews

Abstract

Brain perfusion and blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity are reduced early in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We performed single nucleus RNA sequencing of vascular cells isolated from AD and non-diseased control brains to characterise pathological transcriptional signatures responsible for this. We show that endothelial cells (EC) are enriched for expression of genes associated with susceptibility to AD. Increased β-amyloid is associated with BBB impairment and a dysfunctional angiogenic response related to a failure of increased pro-angiogenic HIF1A to increased VEGFA signalling to EC. This is associated with vascular inflammatory activation, EC senescence and apoptosis. Our genomic dissection of vascular cell risk gene enrichment provides evidence for a role of EC pathology in AD and suggests that reducing vascular inflammatory activation and restoring effective angiogenesis could reduce vascular dysfunction contributing to the genesis or progression of early AD.

PMID:38472200 | DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-46630-z

UK DRI Authors

Stergios Tsartsalis

Dr Stergios Tsartsalis

Head of Scientific Clinic, Molecular Neuroimaging in Psychiatry research group, University of Geneva

Dr Stergios Tsartsalis
Stéphanie Debette

Prof Stéphanie Debette

Professor of Epidemiology and Director of the Bordeaux Population Health research center, University of Bordeaux

Prof Stéphanie Debette
Axel Montagne

Dr Axel Montagne

Group Leader

Exploring the link between cerebrovascular and inflamm-ageing to neurodegeneration and dementia

Dr Axel Montagne
Seth Love

Prof Seth Love

Professor of Neuropathology, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol

Prof Seth Love
Caleb Webber

Prof Caleb Webber

Director of Data Science & Group Leader

Combining state-of-the-art stem cell models with bioinformatics techniques to boost our understanding of the biological mechanisms underlying Parkinson’s disease

Prof Caleb Webber