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Publication Detail
Familial Alzheimer’s Disease Mutations in PSEN1 Lead to Premature Human Stem Cell Neurogenesis
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Publication Type:Journal article
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Publication Sub Type:Article
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Authors:Arber C, Lovejoy C, Harris L, Willumsen N, Alatza A, Casey JM, Lines G, Kerins C, Mueller AK, Zetterberg H, Hardy J, Ryan NS, Fox NC, Lashley T, Wray S
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Publisher:Elsevier
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Publication date:12/01/2021
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Pagination:108615
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Journal:Cell Reports
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Volume:34
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Issue:2
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Status:Published
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Country:United States
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Print ISSN:2211-1247
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PII:S2211-1247(20)31604-1
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Language:eng
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Keywords:Alzheimer’s disease, NOTCH, PSEN1, hippocampus, iPSC, neurogenesis, organoid, γ-secretase
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Author URL:
Abstract
Mutations in presenilin 1 (PSEN1) or presenilin 2 (PSEN2), the catalytic subunit of γ-secretase, cause familial Alzheimer's disease (fAD). We hypothesized that mutations in PSEN1 reduce Notch signaling and alter neurogenesis. Expression data from developmental and adult neurogenesis show relative enrichment of Notch and γ-secretase expression in stem cells, whereas expression of APP and β-secretase is enriched in neurons. We observe premature neurogenesis in fAD iPSCs harboring PSEN1 mutations using two orthogonal systems: cortical differentiation in 2D and cerebral organoid generation in 3D. This is partly driven by reduced Notch signaling. We extend these studies to adult hippocampal neurogenesis in mutation-confirmed postmortem tissue. fAD cases show mutation-specific effects and a trend toward reduced abundance of newborn neurons, supporting a premature aging phenotype. Altogether, these results support altered neurogenesis as a result of fAD mutations and suggest that neural stem cell biology is affected in aging and disease.
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