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Patient-specific Alzheimer-like pathology in trisomy 21 cerebral organoids reveals BACE2 as a gene dose-sensitive AD suppressor in human brain

Ivan Alić, Pollyanna Goh, Aoife Murray, Erik Portelius, Eleni Gkanatsiou, Gillian Gough, Kin Y. Mok, David Koschut, Reinhard Brunmeir, Yee Jie Yeap, Niamh L. O’Brien, Jürgen Groet, Xiaowei Shao, Steven Havlicek, N. Ray Dunn

Molecular Psychiatry · 2020 · ▲ 123 citations

Abstract

A population of more than six million people worldwide at high risk of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are those with Down Syndrome (DS, caused by trisomy 21 (T21)), 70% of whom develop dementia during lifetime, caused by an extra copy of β-amyloid-(Aβ)-precursor-protein gene. We report AD-like pathology in cerebral organoids grown in vitro from non-invasively sampled strands of hair from 71% of DS donors. The pathology consisted of extracellular diffuse and fibrillar Aβ deposits, hyperphosphorylated/pathologically conformed Tau, and premature neuronal loss. Presence/absence of AD-like pathology was donor-specific (reproducible between individual organoids/iPSC lines/experiments). Pathology could be triggered in pathology-negative T21 organoids by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated elimination of the third copy of chromosome 21 gene BACE2, but prevented by combined chemical β and γ-secretase inhibition. We found that T21 organoids secrete increased proportions of Aβ-preventing (Aβ1-19) and Aβ-degradation products (Aβ1-20 and Aβ1-34). We show these profiles mirror in cerebrospinal fluid of people with DS. We demonstrate that this protective mechanism is mediated by BACE2-trisomy and cross-inhibited by clinically trialled BACE1 inhibitors. Combined, our data prove the physiological role of BACE2 as a dose-sensitive AD-suppressor gene, potentially explaining the dementia delay in ~30% of people with DS. We also show that DS cerebral organoids could be explored as pre-morbid AD-risk population detector and a system for hypothesis-free drug screens as well as identification of natural suppressor genes for neurodegenerative diseases.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41380-020-0806-5
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2026-06-04 MST

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APA
Alić, I., Goh, P., Murray, A., Portelius, E., Gkanatsiou, E., Gough, G., Mok, K.Y., Koschut, D., Brunmeir, R., Yeap, Y.J., O’Brien, N.L., Groet, J., Shao, X., Havlicek, S., Dunn, N.R., Kvartsberg, H., Brinkmalm, G., Hithersay, R., Startin, C.M., &amp; Hamburg, S. (2020). Patient-specific Alzheimer-like pathology in trisomy 21 cerebral organoids reveals BACE2 as a gene dose-sensitive AD suppressor in human brain. <em>Molecular Psychiatry</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-020-0806-5
Vancouver
Alić I, Goh P, Murray A, Portelius E, Gkanatsiou E, Gough G, et al. Patient-specific Alzheimer-like pathology in trisomy 21 cerebral organoids reveals BACE2 as a gene dose-sensitive AD suppressor in human brain. Molecular Psychiatry. 2020. doi:10.1038/s41380-020-0806-5.
BibTeX
@article{ivan2020Patien, title = {Patient-specific Alzheimer-like pathology in trisomy 21 cerebral organoids reveals BACE2 as a gene dose-sensitive AD suppressor in human brain}, author = {Ivan Alić and Pollyanna Goh and Aoife Murray and Erik Portelius and Eleni Gkanatsiou and Gillian Gough and Kin Y. Mok and David Koschut and Reinhard Brunmeir and Yee Jie Yeap and Niamh L. O’Brien and Jürgen Groet and Xiaowei Shao and Steven Havlicek and N. Ray Dunn and Hlin Kvartsberg and Gunnar Brinkmalm and Rosalyn Hithersay and Carla M. Startin and Sarah Hamburg and Margaret Phillips and Konstantin Pervushin and Mark Turmaine and David Wallon and Anne Rovelet‐Lecrux}, journal = {Molecular Psychiatry}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1038/s41380-020-0806-5}, }

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