LINKING AXONAL PATHOLOGY TO ELN DYSFUNCTION VIA POLYGENIC RISK IN HUMAN TISSUE AND HIPSC MODELS OF ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
Allen Institute for Brain Science
Presentation
Date TBA
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Poster Board
PS05-09AM-187
Poster
View posterAbstract
Axonal organization in the human brain remains incompletely characterized, particularly in the context of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD). This represents a critical gap, as emerging evidence suggests that axonal abnormalities (particularly the emergence of dystrophic axons) occur early in AD and may be linked to disruptions in the endo-lysosomal network (ELN). However, the mechanistic relationship between ELN dysfunction and axonal pathology remains poorly understood.
Genetic studies have implicated ELN-related genes in AD risk, motivating the development of an endo-lysosomal polygenic risk score (ePRS) that aggregates GWAS-identified SNPs weighted by effect size, allele frequency, and dosage to quantify cumulative genetic burden.
This project integrates postmortem brain tissue from an ePRS-stratified donor cohort with donor-matched human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neuron models to examine how genetic risk influences axonal structure and ELN function.
We apply a hydrogel-based expansion and clearing pipeline optimized for large-scale postmortem tissue, enabling high-throughput, single-axon resolution imaging via light-sheet microscopy. This pipeline reliably resolves region-specific patterns of axonal organization in human white matter, confirming the feasibility of high-resolution axonal mapping. By applying these methods to brain regions that span the stages of AD progression, we aim to identify disease-associated changes in axonal architecture. In parallel, we use donor-matched hiPSC-derived neurons cultured in microfluidic chambers to isolate axons from somas and perform live-cell imaging of ELN dynamics using LysoTracker. This dual-platform framework aims to elucidate how polygenic risk for ELN dysfunction contributes to axonal pathology in Alzheimer’s disease.
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