V

Vanessa F. Langness

Stanford University

ORCID: 0000-0003-3140-3008

Publishes on Alzheimer's disease research and treatments, Nerve injury and regeneration, Pain Mechanisms and Treatments. 12 papers and 501 citations.

12Publications
501Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Cholesterol Metabolism Is a Druggable Axis that Independently Regulates Tau and Amyloid-β in iPSC-Derived Alzheimer’s Disease Neurons
Cited by 369Open Access

Genetic, epidemiologic, and biochemical evidence suggests that predisposition to Alzheimer's disease (AD) may arise from altered cholesterol metabolism, although the molecular pathways that may link cholesterol to AD phenotypes are only partially understood. Here, we perform a phenotypic screen for pTau accumulation in AD-patient iPSC-derived neurons and identify cholesteryl esters (CE), the storage product of excess cholesterol, as upstream regulators of Tau early during AD development. Using isogenic induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines carrying mutations in the cholesterol-binding domain of APP or APP null alleles, we found that while CE also regulate Aβ secretion, the effects of CE on Tau and Aβ are mediated by independent pathways. Efficacy and toxicity screening in iPSC-derived astrocytes and neurons showed that allosteric activation of CYP46A1 lowers CE specifically in neurons and is well tolerated by astrocytes. These data reveal that CE independently regulate Tau and Aβ and identify a druggable CYP46A1-CE-Tau axis in AD.

Cholesterol-lowering drugs reduce APP processing to Aβ by inducing APP dimerization
Vanessa F. Langness, Rik van der Kant, Utpal Das et al.|Molecular Biology of the Cell|2020
Cited by 44Open Access

Amyloid beta (Aβ) is a major component of amyloid plaques, which are a key pathological hallmark found in the brains of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. We show that statins are effective at reducing Aβ in human neurons from nondemented control subjects, as well as subjects with familial AD and sporadic AD. Aβ is derived from amyloid precursor protein (APP) through sequential proteolytic cleavage by BACE1 and γ-secretase. While previous studies have shown that cholesterol metabolism regulates APP processing to Aβ, the mechanism is not well understood. We used iPSC-derived neurons and bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays in transfected cells to elucidate how altering cholesterol metabolism influences APP processing. Altering cholesterol metabolism using statins decreased the generation of sAPPβ and increased levels of full-length APP (flAPP), indicative of reduced processing of APP by BACE1. We further show that statins decrease flAPP interaction with BACE1 and enhance APP dimerization. Additionally, statin-induced changes in APP dimerization and APP-BACE1 are dependent on cholesterol binding to APP. Our data indicate that statins reduce Aβ production by decreasing BACE1 interaction with flAPP and suggest that this process may be regulated through competition between APP dimerization and APP cholesterol binding.

A TrkB and TrkC partial agonist restores deficits in synaptic function and promotes activity‐dependent synaptic and microglial transcriptomic changes in a late‐stage Alzheimer's mouse model
Amira Latif‐Hernandez, Tao Yang, Robert R. Butler et al.|Alzheimer s & Dementia|2024
Cited by 10Open Access

INTRODUCTION: Tropomyosin related kinase B (TrkB) and C (TrkC) receptor signaling promotes synaptic plasticity and interacts with pathways affected by amyloid beta (Aβ) toxicity. Upregulating TrkB/C signaling could reduce Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related degenerative signaling, memory loss, and synaptic dysfunction. METHODS: ) and wild-type controls. Effects on memory and hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) were assessed using electrophysiology, behavioral studies, immunoblotting, immunofluorescence staining, and RNA sequencing. RESULTS: mice, BD10-2 treatment improved memory and LTP deficits. This was accompanied by normalized phosphorylation of protein kinase B (Akt), calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), and AMPA-type glutamate receptors containing the subunit GluA1; enhanced activity-dependent recruitment of synaptic proteins; and increased excitatory synapse number. BD10-2 also had potentially favorable effects on LTP-dependent complement pathway and synaptic gene transcription. DISCUSSION: /Aβ-associated memory and LTP deficits, reduced abnormalities in synapse-related signaling and activity-dependent transcription of synaptic genes, and bolstered transcriptional changes associated with microglial immune response. HIGHLIGHTS: Small molecule modulation of tropomyosin related kinase B (TrkB) and C (TrkC) restores long-term potentiation (LTP) and behavior in an Alzheimer's disease (AD) model. Modulation of TrkB and TrkC regulates synaptic activity-dependent transcription. TrkB and TrkC receptors are candidate targets for translational therapeutics. Electrophysiology combined with transcriptomics elucidates synaptic restoration. LTP identifies neuron and microglia AD-relevant human-mouse co-expression modules.

Twenty years of therapeutic development in tauopathy mouse models: a scoping review
Vanessa F. Langness, Danielle A. Simmons, Tyne L.M. McHugh et al.|Alzheimer s & Dementia|2025
Cited by 2Open Access

Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases characterized by pathological tau protein inclusions and dementia. Tauopathy mouse models with MAPT mutations replicate tau-related pathologies and are widely used for therapeutic research. This scoping review examines 409 treatment evaluations in MAPT mouse models. We identify trends in therapeutic strategies and frequently used mouse models, treatment routes, and endpoints. We also document treatment effects and when treatment is initiated relative to tau pathology emergence. Many treatments produced positive effects in multiple MAPT mouse models across many endpoints but showed limited success in clinical trials. Potential barriers to mouse-to-human translation include differences between mouse and human studies in the timing of treatment initiation relative to tau pathology onset, predominant testing of a limited number of endpoints, lack of translatable treatment response biomarkers, and the limited ability of individual mouse models to represent the diversity of tauopathies. Addressing these obstacles could improve mouse-to-human translation for tauopathy therapeutics. HIGHLIGHTS: Two decades of therapeutic research in tauopathy mouse models were reviewed. Treatments often began before or at tau pathology onset in tauopathy mouse models. Key endpoints (e.g., cognition and synaptic degeneration) were underassessed. Well-characterized preclinical treatments often had limited success in humans. Single-sex mouse studies and a lack of biomarkers hinder clinical translation.