29 May 2026, 11:00
Modeling Human Age - Related Neurodegenerative Disease
Description AbstractAlzheimer s disease AD is a highly prevalent neurodegenerative disease that exclusively affectselderly people Here we used direct conversion of primarily sporadic AD patient fibroblasts intoinduced neurons iNs to generate an age equivalent neuronal model Patient derived iNs exhibitstrong AD specific transcriptome neuronal signatures characterized by down regulation of maturefunctional and morphological properties and up regulation of immature neuronal and neural stemcell associated pathways Mapping AD and control iNs to longitudinal transcriptome data frommaturing human neurons demonstrated that AD iNs are fully converted into iNs but reflect a dedifferentiatedneuronal identity Epigenetic landscape profiling revealed an aberrant cellularprogram underlying their immature neuronal state which shares similarities with malignanttransformation and age dependent epigenetic erosion To probe for the involvement of aging wegenerated iPSC neurons from the small cohort which indeed showed non significant diseaserelatedtranscriptome signatures This is consistent with epigenetic aging clock and brainoncogenesis mapping which indicated that unlike iPSC neurons iNs more closely reflect adultand old brain stages rendering them a valuable tool for studying adult specific age relatedneurodegeneration In this model AD related neuronal changes appear less as a mereaccumulation of damaging events but rather an age dependent cellular program that impairsneuronal identity Zoom details https www embl org internal information updates distinguished visitor lecture fred rusty gage... AbstractAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is a highly prevalent neurodegenerative disease that exclusively affectselderly people. Here, we used direct conversion of primarily sporadic AD patient fibroblasts intoinduced neurons (iNs) to generate an age-equivalent neuronal model. Patient-derived iNs exhibitstrong AD-specific transcriptome neuronal signatures characterized by down-regulation of maturefunctional and morphological properties and up-regulation of immature neuronal and neural stemcell-associated pathways. Mapping AD and control iNs to longitudinal transcriptome data frommaturing human neurons demonstrated that AD iNs are fully converted into iNs, but reflect a dedifferentiatedneuronal identity. Epigenetic landscape profiling revealed an aberrant cellularprogram underlying their immature neuronal state, which shares similarities with malignanttransformation and age-dependent epigenetic...
Speaker(s): Fred Rusty Gage, The Salk Institute, USA
Host: Mathieu Boulard
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Rome
Additional information
Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a highly prevalent neurodegenerative disease that exclusively affects
elderly people. Here, we used direct conversion of primarily sporadic AD patient fibroblasts into
induced neurons (iNs) to generate an age-equivalent neuronal model. Patient-derived iNs exhibit
strong AD-specific transcriptome neuronal signatures characterized by down-regulation of mature
functional and morphological properties and up-regulation of immature neuronal and neural stem
cell-associated pathways. Mapping AD and control iNs to longitudinal transcriptome data from
maturing human neurons demonstrated that AD iNs are fully converted into iNs, but reflect a dedifferentiated
neuronal identity. Epigenetic landscape profiling revealed an aberrant cellular
program underlying their immature neuronal state, which shares similarities with malignant
transformation and age-dependent epigenetic erosion. To probe for the involvement of aging, we
generated iPSC neurons from the small cohort, which, indeed, showed non-significant diseaserelated
transcriptome signatures. This is consistent with epigenetic aging clock and brain
oncogenesis mapping, which indicated that unlike iPSC neurons, iNs more closely reflect adult
and old brain stages, rendering them a valuable tool for studying adult-specific, age-related
neurodegeneration. In this model, AD-related neuronal changes appear less as a mere
accumulation of damaging events, but rather an age-dependent cellular program that impairs
neuronal identity.
Zoom details: https://www.embl.org/internal-information/updates/distinguished-visitor-lecture-fred-rusty-gage/