Proteostasis and lysosomal repair deficits in transdifferentiated neurons of Alzheimer’s disease

Ching‐Chieh Chou(Research Network (United States)), Ryan T. Vest(Stanford University), Miguel A. Prado(Harvard University), Joshua Wilson‐Grady(Harvard University), João A. Paulo(Harvard University), Yohei Shibuya(Stanford University), Patricia Moran‐Losada(Neurosciences Institute), Ting-Ting Lee(Research Network (United States)), Jian Luo(Palo Alto Veterans Institute for Research), Steven P. Gygi(Harvard University), Jeffery W. Kelly(Scripps Research Institute), Daniel Finley(Harvard University), Marius Wernig(Stanford University), Tony Wyss‐Coray(Neurosciences Institute), Judith Frydman(Neurosciences Institute)
Nature Cell Biology
March 26, 2025
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

Ageing is the most prominent risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the cellular mechanisms linking neuronal proteostasis decline to the characteristic aberrant protein deposits in the brains of patients with AD remain elusive. Here we develop transdifferentiated neurons (tNeurons) from human dermal fibroblasts as a neuronal model that retains ageing hallmarks and exhibits AD-linked vulnerabilities. Remarkably, AD tNeurons accumulate proteotoxic deposits, including phospho-tau and amyloid β, resembling those in APP mouse brains and the brains of patients with AD. Quantitative tNeuron proteomics identify ageing- and AD-linked deficits in proteostasis and organelle homeostasis, most notably in endosome-lysosomal components. Lysosomal deficits in aged tNeurons, including constitutive lysosomal damage and ESCRT-mediated lysosomal repair defects, are exacerbated in AD tNeurons and linked to inflammatory cytokine secretion and cell death. Providing support for the centrality of lysosomal deficits in AD, compounds ameliorating lysosomal function reduce amyloid β deposits and cytokine secretion. Thus, the tNeuron model system reveals impaired lysosomal homeostasis as an early event of ageing and AD.


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