NEURONAL APOPTOSIS SHAPES DISEASE-ASSOCIATED MICROGLIAL TRAJECTORIES IN PRESYMPTOMATIC ALZHEIMER’S PATIENT-DERIVED IPSC MODELS
University of Oxford
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS07-10AM-192
Poster
View posterAbstract
Twenty iPSC lines from presymptomatic AD participants from the Deep and Frequent Phenotyping study were differentiated into microglia. iPSC-microglia were exposed to non-apoptotic (NAN) or apoptotic neurons (AN) and subjected to scRNA-sequencing. After quality control, 14 lines (11 APOE3/E4, 3 APOE4/E4) were retained. Preprocessing was performed with the Panpipes pipeline, cells were annotated using published microglia atlases. Clustering, batch correction, and trajectory inference were performed with Monocle3. EdgeR was used for abundance analysis. Differential gene expression analysis was conducted using Seurat, and gene ontology enrichment (GOE) was performed with ClusterProfiler package.
Trajectory analysis identified two trajectories leading from cycling to disease-associated microglia (DAM). Trajectory towards GPNMB-high CXCR4+ TREM2+ Lipox-DAM via TREM2+ IFN responsive microglia was preferred in NAN environment. Alternatively, when subjected to AN, trajectory towards LPL-high TREM2+ DAM via MITO-high DAM was more prominent. Comparing microglia subtype ratios between NAN and AN environments showed a decrease in TREM2-IFN responsive microglia (14.2% in NAN to 1.0% in AN, p<0.05) and an increase in MITO-high DAM (7.2% in NAN to 15.3% in AN, p<0.05). In comparison to TREM2+ IFN-responsive microglia, GOE highlighted MITO-high DAM upregulation of endocytosis-related pathways and downregulation of immune response pathways.
In conclusion, presymptomatic AD iPSC-microglia follow two distinct trajectories toward DAM, with an apoptotic neuron environment favouring a MITO-high intermediate. Transcriptomically, MITO-high DAM appears more endocytic than immune-responsive.
Recommended posters
SINGLE-CELL TRANSCRIPTOMICS IDENTIFIES NECROPTOTIC MEG3+ EXCITATORY NEURONS IN AN IPSC MODEL OF ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
Akshay Jaya Ganesh, Marcel Schilling, Ana Gutiérrez-Franco, Maria Varea Martinez, Franz Ake, Loris Mularoni, Mireya Plass
INTEGRATIVE ANALYSIS OF MICROGLIAL SINGLE-CELL TRANSCRIPTOMES IN AD MOUSE MODELS AND HUMAN DISEASE
Marina Guillot Fernández, Aysha Bhojwani Cabrera, Alejandro Expósito Coca, Yasmina Manso Sanz, Eduardo Soriano García, José López Atalaya
NEURON AND MICROGLIA-SPECIFIC CHANGES IN SORL1-ASSOCIATED ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE IN THE HUMAN AND MOUSE BRAIN
Sara Vida, Balázs Pósfai, Krisztina Tóth, Zoltán Máté, Ferenc Erdélyi, István Katona, Henne Holstege, Olav M. Andersen, Ádám Dénes
ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE MODELS IN IPSC-DERIVED GLUTAMATERGIC NEURONS SHOW INCREASED SECRETION OF PATHOGENIC AMYLOID BETA PEPTIDES
Veronica Acevedo Morejon, Aurora Veteleanu, Tony Oosterveen, Germano Belli Valletta, George Shipley, Hannah Garnett, Christopher Aruthan, Philippa Barton, Stefan Milde, Magdalena Gamperl, Sejla Salic-Hainzl, Tilmann Buerckstuemmer, Amanda Turner, Karl Firth, Oliver Dovey, Will Bernard
ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF HUMAN NEURONS DERIVED FROM PATIENTS WITH ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
Natalia Mierzwa, Anna Chołoniewska, Adam Figarski, Eliza Lutostańska, Michalina Wężyk
ASTROCYTE-DERIVED EXOSOMAL SIGNALLING INDUCES PATHOLOGICAL NEURONAL TRANSCRIPTIONAL RESPONSES IN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
Komal Bana, Manjari Tripathi, Faheem Arshad, Anant Chaudhary, Sachin Suresh Tiwari