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'Patient-specific Alzheimer-like pathology in trisomy 21 cerebral organoids reveals BACE2 as a gene-dose-sensitive AD-suppressor in human brain'

Authors :
Jorge Ghiso
Agueda Rostagno
Steven Havlicek
Sarah Hamburg
Ivan Alić
Carla M. Startin
Rosalyn Hithersay
Eleni Gkanatsiou
David Koschut
Hlin Kvartsberg
Hilkka Soininen
Emanuela V. Volpi
Xiaowei Shao
Goran Šimić
Željka Krsnik
Dean Nižetić
Mark Turmaine
Joanne E. Martin
Jürgen Groet
Aoife Murray
Erik Portelius
Pollyanna Goh
Jia Nee Foo
Niamh L. O'Brien
Henrik Zetterberg
Andre Strydom
Yee Jie Yeap
David Wallon
Gillian Gough
John Hardy
Margaret Phillips
N. Ray Dunn
Dinko Mitrečić
Gunnar Brinkmalm
Reinhard Brunmeir
Kin Y. Mok
Anne Rovelet-Lecrux
Kaj Blennow
Ivica Kostović
Konstantin Pervushin
Paul T. Francis
David Laurence Becker
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

A population of >6 million people worldwide at high risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are those with Down Syndrome (DS, caused by trisomy 21 (T21)), 70% of whom develop dementia during lifetime, caused by an extra copy of β-amyloid-(Aβ)-precursor-protein gene. We report AD-like pathology in cerebral organoids grownin vitrofrom non-invasively sampled strands of hair from 71% of DS donors. The pathology consisted of extracellular diffuse and fibrillar Aβ deposits, hyperphosphorylated/pathologically conformed Tau, and premature neuronal loss.Presence/absence of AD-like pathology was donor-specific (reproducible between individual organoids/iPSC lines/experiments). Pathology could be triggered in pathology-negative T21 organoids by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated elimination of the third copy of chromosome-21-geneBACE2, but prevented by combined chemical β and γ-secretase inhibition. We found that T21-organoids secrete increased proportions of Aβ-preventing (Aβ1-19) and Aβ-degradation products (Aβ1-20 and Aβ1-34). We show these profiles mirror in cerebrospinal fluid of people with DS. We demonstrate that this protective mechanism is mediated by BACE2-trisomy and cross-inhibited by clinically trialled BACE1-inhibitors. Combined, our data prove the physiological role ofBACE2as a dose-sensitive AD-suppressor gene, potentially explaining the dementia delay in ∼30% of people with DS. We also show that DS cerebral organoids could be explored as pre-morbid AD-risk population detector and a system for hypothesis-free drug screens as well as identification of natural suppressor genes for neurodegenerative diseases.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....111391dc58615029c3c88bcbe66e06ec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.29.918037