Chromatin remodeling is a dynamic epigenetic process that alters chromatin structure to gauge gene accessibility, enabling precise spatiotemporal gene expression, with disruptions often underlying neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs), although the mechanistic underpinning remains incompletely understood. Despite essential roles in chromatin remodeling processes such as DNA methylation, and histone acetylation and deposition, DMAP1 has not been implicated in human disease. We identified 20 individuals from 16 families with a syndromic NDD carrying homozygous or compound heterozygous variants in DMAP1. Neural-specific knockdown of its Drosophila ortholog, dDMAP1, caused pupal lethality, structural defects in the mushroom body (MB), decreased dendrite length, abnormal social behavior and mechanical-induced seizures. Human reference DMAP1 could largely compensate for the loss of dDMAP1 in knockdown flies, whereas patient variants failed to restore or differentially rescued the phenotypes, confirming their pathogenicity with differing severity. Transcriptome profiling of dDMAP1 knockdown fly brains nominated Cbl and SF1 as downstream targets. Their overexpression rescued the aforementioned lethality and MB defects. Finally, a DNA methylation episignature was identified, leading to the molecular diagnosis of an additional patient. Our findings demonstrate that biallelic inactivating variants in DMAP1 cause a syndromic NDD, expanding the short list of recessive disease-causing genes within the epigenetic machinery.
Qin Wang, Andrew K. Sobering, Christian Tirrito, Sadegheh Haghshenas, Tina Duelund Hjortshøj, Konrad Platzer, Silke Redler, Michael E. March, Leticia S. Matsuoka, Hang Xi, Josiah Zoodsma, Yuanhua Chen, Mari Mori, Marco L. Leung, Nathalie Couque, Alain Verloes, Antoine Pouzet, Noor A.A. Giesbertz, Marleen E.H. Simon, Ashley K. Yearwood, Dominique L. Assing, Tzung-Chien Hsieh, Jing-Mei Li, Michael A. Levy, Jennifer Kerkhof, Haley McConkey, Jessica Rzasa, Carolyn Lauzon-Young, Raashda A. Sulaiman, Firdous Abdulwahab, Hanan E. Shamseldin, Naif A.M. Almontashiri, Manal Afqi, Vettaikorumakankav Vedanarayanan, Maria J. Guillen Sacoto, Ingrid M. Wentzensen, Nadirah S. Damseh, Rivka Birnbaum, Babeth van Ommeren, Saskia M.J. Hopman, Maha S. Zaki, Gehad Elmakkawy, Erum Afzal, JiHye Kim, Stephanie Efthymiou, Henry Houlden, Ambreen Nusrat, Mathias Toft, Uzma Abdullah, Zafar Iqbal, Shannon Terek, Fowzan S. Alkuraya, Elizabeth J. Bhoj, Reza Maroofian, Bekim Sadikovic, Hakon Hakonarson, Yuanquan Song, Dong Li
Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype (GBM, WHO grade 4) is the most common malignant glioma in adults and is characterized by a hypoxic and immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME). Bone marrow-derived tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) dominate the immune landscape in GBM and are recruited to the peri-necrotic niche following the onset of necrosis. CLEC5A has the strongest association with poor clinical outcome among immune-related genes in GBM, and is preferentially expressed in hypoxic, peri-necrotic TAMs. CLEC5A overexpression promotes TAM polarization toward an immunosuppressive phenotype, and secretion of immunoregulatory cytokines. Using an RCAS/tv-a GBM model with bone marrow transplantation from Clec5a-/- donor mice, we demonstrated that CLEC5A loss prolongs survival, delays tumor progression, and attenuates TME immunosuppression. Mechanistically, podoplanin (PDPN) expressed on glioma cells directly engages CLEC5A and triggers downstream Syk-JAK-STAT3 signaling in TAMs. Pharmacologic Syk inhibition suppresses glioma growth, diminishes TAM infiltration and polarization, reverses the immunosuppressive TME, and prolongs survival in vivo. Collectively, our findings indicate that the PDPN-CLEC5A-Syk-STAT3 axis orchestrates TAM polarization and TME immunosuppression in the peri-necrotic niche of GBM, highlighting CLEC5A/Syk as a promising therapeutic target for reversing the immunosuppressive TME and improving outcomes.
Jiabo Li, Xuya Wang, Luqing Tong, Bo Feng, Ling-kai Shih, Steven M. Markwell, Hannah Nuszen, Tomasz Gruchala, Nicholas G. Lam, Petros Basakis, Erika Ruiz-Yamamoto, Deyu Fang, Roger Stupp, Xuejun Yang, Daniel J. Brat
The role of the epigenome in age-related neurodegenerative disorders remains understudied. Here, we analyzed circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from blood to detect methylation changes as a liquid biopsy for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Our study included 20 patients with sporadic ALS, 10 patients with C9orf72-associated ALS, 10 asymptomatic carriers of the C9orf72 repeat expansion mutation, and 21 nondisease control individuals. Following targeted enzymatic methyl-sequencing (EM-seq) of approximately 4 million CpG sites, we detected numerous differentially methylated genes, including several implicated in ALS disease risk and pathogenesis. By integrating multiple epigenetic features, we delineated a distinct epigenetic signature, which achieved an average area under the curve (AUC) of 0.91 ± 0.10 upon receiver operator characteristic (ROC) analysis, which enabled detection of approximately 70% of patients with ALS with close to 100% specificity. Furthermore, we also identified a set of genes whose methylation status significantly correlated with clinical disease progression and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) neurofilament levels. Our results reveal the potential of cfDNA-based biomarkers to accurately diagnose ALS and potentially predict disease progression.
Sebastian Michels, Chaorong Chen, Wolfgang P. Ruf, M. Madhy Garcia Garcia, Frederick J. Arnold, Zhuoxing Wu, Craig L. Bennett, Daniel Shams, Leslie M. Thompson, Alyssa C. Walker, Dennis W. Dickson, Leonard Petrucelli, Johannes Dorst, Mercedes Prudencio, Wei Li, Albert R. La Spada
While clinical trials of human pluripotent stem cell–derived midbrain dopamine (mDA) neuron precursor grafts for Parkinson’s disease (PD) are ongoing, current protocols remain suboptimal. In particular, the yield of TH+ mDA neurons after in vivo grafting and the expression of certain mDA neuron and subtype-specific markers require improvement. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses of grafts have revealed low proportions of mDA neurons and substantial off-target contamination. Here, we present an optimized mDA neuron differentiation strategy that builds on our clinical-grade (“Boost”) protocol by adding FGF18 and IWP2 treatment (“Boost+”) at the neurogenesis stage. Boost+ mDA neurons show higher expression of EN1, PITX3, and ALDH1A1. Improvements in mDA neuron yield and transcriptional similarity to primary mDA neurons are observed in vitro and following transplantation. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing demonstrates enrichment of A9 mDA neurons within Boost+ grafts. Functional studies in vitro demonstrate increased dopamine production and release and improved electrophysiological properties. In vivo analyses show higher percentages of TH+ mDA neurons, resulting in efficient rescue of amphetamine-induced rotation behavior in the 6-OHDA rat model and rescue of deficits in some nondrug-induced assays, including the ladder rung assay, which are not improved by Boost mDA neurons. The Boost+ conditions present an optimized differentiation protocol with advantages for disease modeling and mDA neuron grafting paradigms.
Tae Wan Kim, Jinghua Piao, Vittoria D. Bocchi, So Yeon Koo, Se Joon Choi, Fayzan Chaudhry, Donghe Yang, Hyein S. Cho, Emiliano Hergenreder, Lucia Ruiz Perera, Subhashini Joshi, Zaki Abou Mrad, Nidia Claros, Shkurte Ademi Donohue, Yeong Eun Im, Hyo Jae Jeong, Anika K. Frank, Ryan M. Walsh, Eugene V. Mosharov, Doron Betel, Viviane Tabar, Lorenz Studer
Skraban-Deardorff syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disorder caused by WD repeat domain 26 (WDR26) haploinsufficiency, is characterized by intellectual disability, seizures, autistic-like behaviors, and craniofacial anomalies. Despite its genetic association with variants disrupting the C-terminal to LisH (CTLH) E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, the molecular mechanisms linking WDR26 dysfunction to neurodevelopmental deficits remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that Wdr26 heterozygous-KO mice (Wdr26+/–) recapitulated core clinical features of the syndrome, including learning and memory impairments, social dysfunction, heightened seizure susceptibility, and motor deficits, alongside rare craniofacial and dental abnormalities. Mechanistically, Wdr26 haploinsufficiency stabilized RUNX1 translocation partner 1 (RUNX1T1), a transcriptional coactivator critical for neuronal differentiation, by impairing its ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, consequently disrupting the level of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2), a key regulator of dendritic architecture and synaptic plasticity. Early intervention in neonatal Wdr26+/– mice (P0.5) using AAV-shRNA–mediated Runx1t1 knockdown reversed MAP2 overexpression and behavioral deficits. Notably, the antipsychotic risperidone ameliorated cognitive and social impairments in Wdr26+/– mice by upregulating WDR26 levels, suggesting a potential therapeutic avenue. Our findings not only establish the animal model as a robust preclinical tool but also define the WDR26/RUNX1T1/MAP2 regulatory axis as pivotal to the syndrome’s pathogenesis, while identifying actionable therapeutic targets.
Xingyun Xu, Yaohui Zhou, Shiyao Xu, Hongjie Zhou, Xuexia Lin, Yuhao Luo, Yu Xu, Zhigang Miao, Wei Ge, Hao Yang, Xingshun Xu
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1) is a neurodegenerative disease marked by progressive motor deficits and Purkinje cell (PC) degeneration, driven by polyglutamine expansion in ataxin-1. While oligodendroglial dysfunction precedes PC loss, its direct contribution toward SCA1 pathogenesis remains unclear. Here, using an oligodendroglia-specific SCA1 conditional knock-in mouse model, we demonstrate that mutant ataxin-1 in oligodendrocytes is sufficient to drive aspects of SCA1-related pathology, including dysregulated myelination, PC axonal shrinkage, and torpedo formation, ultimately impairing motor coordination. Transcriptomic analysis uncovers cerebellar oligodendrocyte subtypes with distinct gene expression signatures and aberrant abundance that contribute to demyelination. This, compounded by a progressive decline in the neuroprotective functions of a cerebellar-specific oligodendrocyte subtype, establishes a critical link between demyelination, axo-myelinic dysfunction, and axonal pathology in SCA1. Upstream transcriptional regulator analysis in oligodendroglia identifies TCF7L2 and HTT as key mediators of oligodendroglial dysfunction in SCA1, suggesting shared pathogenic mechanisms with other polyglutamine diseases. Collectively, these findings establish oligodendroglia as key mediators of SCA1 pathogenesis and underscore their critical role in preserving PC axonal integrity.
Changwoo Lee, Rosalie M. Grijalva, Leon Tejwani, Eunwoo Bae, Alison Chase, Hannah Ro, Hannah Kim, Victor Olmos, James P. Orengo, Janghoo Lim
Neuropathic pain affects over 20 million people in the United States, and painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN), a common complication of diabetes, is among its most prevalent and treatment-resistant forms. Although PDN is characterized by nociceptor dysfunction, the upstream peripheral mechanisms remain incompletely understood. While dorsal root ganglion (DRG) nociceptor hyperexcitability is a hallmark of PDN, emerging evidence suggests that non-neuronal skin cells may modulate nociceptor function. Here, we investigated whether epidermal Langerhans cells (LCs) contribute to neuropathic pain in PDN through neuroimmune signaling. Using a clinically relevant high-fat diet (HFD) mouse model, transgenic LC ablation, behavioral assays, human skin biopsies, and single-cell RNA sequencing of epidermis and DRG, we found that LC density increased in male diabetic mice in parallel with mechanical allodynia. In human PDN skin, LCs exhibited increased volume and dendritic complexity correlating with diabetes duration. Genetic depletion of LCs prevented mechanical allodynia and spontaneous pain-like behavior in male, but not female, HFD mice, revealing a sex-dependent contribution. Single-cell and interactome analyses identified male-specific inflammatory LC programs, including upregulation of chemokine signaling pathways. Consistently, LC secretome profiling showed increased CCL2 release, and local CCR2 blockade reversed allodynia. These findings identify epidermal LCs as peripheral regulators of PDN pain and highlight sex-dependent chemokine-mediated neuron-immune communication at the skin-nerve interface.
Paola Pacifico, Dale George, Nirupa D. Jayaraj, Dongjun Ren, James S. Coy-Dibley, Abdelhak A. Belmadani, Sofia Veronesi, Mirna Andelic, Daniele Cartelli, Grazia Devigili, Raffaella Lombardi, Giuseppe Lauria Pinter, Amy S. Paller, Richard J. Miller, Daniela M. Menichella
Western diets (WD), high in saturated fats such as palmitic acid (PA), promote enteric neurodegeneration and motility disorders. Using murine models, in vitro systems, and human myenteric ganglia, we investigated whether WD and PA drive iron-dependent ferroptotic injury in the enteric nervous system. Mice were fed control diet (CD) or WD for 12 weeks, with or without systemic AAV9-MaCPNS2 delivery of Nfe2l2 to enteric neurons. Colonic motility was assessed by bead-expulsion assay. Ferroptosis was assessed using convergent readouts including iron dysregulation (TfR1, FTH-1, labile and mitochondrial Fe2+), lipid peroxidation (C11-BODIPY and 4-HNE), GPX4 suppression, and pharmacologic inhibition by ferrostatin-1 (Fer-1) in primary enteric neurons, murine myenteric plexuses, and human networks of myenteric ganglia (nhMPG). WD-fed mice exhibited delayed colonic transit, increased TfR1 and FTH-1, and vulnerability of nNOS neurons; these changes were reversed by Nfe2l2 overexpression. RNA-seq of PA-treated IM-FEN neuronal cells revealed disrupted of neurotransmitter signaling, reduced mitochondrial and antioxidant programs, and increased iron import and lipid peroxidation signatures. PA increased labile iron, mitochondrial ROS, membrane depolarization, Ca2+ dysregulation, 4-HNE, and Mfrn2, while Fer-1 preserved mitochondrial integrity, viability, and ENS function. In human nhMPG, PA induced enteric neuronal iron loading and ferroptosis, supporting translational relevance to diet-associated enteric neuropathy.
Arun Balasubramaniam, Dmitrii Pavlov, Yunpeng Du, Jeremy Reeves, Alan Harzman, Yunshan Liu, Francesca Cingolani, Xinxu Yuan, Jay M. Patel, Simon Musyoka Mwangi, Peijian He, C. Michael Hart, Wenhui Hu, Fievos L. Christofi, Shanthi Srinivasan
BORCS5 encodes a subunit of the BLOC-One-Related Complex (BORC), which is known to promote anterograde movement and fusion of lysosomes. We identified 16 individuals from nine families with bi-allelic BORCS5 variants, revealing a spectrum of neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative phenotypes. Carriers of homozygous protein-truncating variants (PTVs), resulting in complete loss of BORCS5, presented with prenatally lethal arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, brain malformations, and neuropathological evidence of neuroaxonal dystrophy. Individuals with missense or splice-site variants presented differently, with microcephaly, developmental epileptic encephalopathy, optic atrophy, spasticity, and progressive movement disorders. In this group, brain MRI showed diffuse hypomyelination, corpus callosum abnormalities, as well as progressive global cerebral atrophy, consistent with neurodegeneration. Borcs5 knockout in zebrafish exhibited microcephaly, motor deficits, and increased seizure susceptibility, mirroring the patients’ clinical presentation. At the cellular level, only BORCS5 PTVs, but not missense variants, led to perinuclear lysosomal clustering and impaired lysosomal axonal trafficking in induced pluripotential stem cell-derived forebrain neurons. However, both PTVs and missense variants were associated with reduced lysosomal proteolysis and activity of lysosomal hydrolases glucocerebrosidase and cathepsin B, indicating lysosomal dysfunction. Our study reveals a role for BORCS5 in modulation of lysosomal function, in addition to its known role in lysosome movement and fusion, possibly underlying the diverse clinical manifestations in individuals with BORCS5-related disorders.
Niccolò E. Mencacci, Georgia Minakaki, Reza Maroofian, Raffaella De Pace, Adeline Paimboeuf, Tiago Branco Fonseca, Tatiana Abramova, Patrick Shannon, David Chitayat, Francesca Magrinelli, Wesley J. Peng, Diptaman Chatterjee, Sara H. Eldessouky, Julia Baptista, Tamas Marton, Julie Vogt, Juan Dario Ortigoza-Escobar, Loreto Martorell, Marta Gómez-Chiari, Ingrid M. Wentzensen, Erik-Jan Kamsteeg, Maha S. Zaki, Annarita Scardamaglia, Giovanni Zifarelli, Zuhair Nasser Al-Hassnan, Elka Miller, Shiri Shinar, Lova S. Matsa, Sri Hari Chandan Appikonda, Ghada A. Otaify, Khalid Al-Thihli, Almundher Al-Maawali, Michael Schwake, Mariasavina Severino, Henry Houlden, Shunmoogum A. Patten, Juan S. Bonifacino, Kailash P. Bhatia, Dimitri Krainc
Primary and metastatic brain tumors exhibit resistance to immunotherapies that demonstrate efficacy in peripheral cancer settings. While many immunotherapies aim to enhance CD8+ T cell infiltration and functionality in established tumors, identification of neoantigens support emerging immunopreventative tactics against brain cancer. Functionally potent tissue-resident memory CD8+ T cells (TRM) can be generated in the brain following peripheral infection or vaccination. However, the ability of brain TRM to prevent intracranial malignancy remains unknown. Here, mice were seeded with tumor-specific or bystander brain TRM via peripheral infection prior to depletion of circulating memory T cells (TCIRCM) and subsequent brain tumor challenge. Tumor-specific brain TRM durably protected mice against intracranial malignancy even in the absence TCIRCM. These brain TRM persisted in tumor-surviving mice and protected against a second antigen-matched challenge. Importantly, a translationally-relevant mRNA-lipid nanoparticle (LNP) vaccine phenocopied peripheral infection-induced outcomes, generating functional brain TRM that controlled tumor growth. Altogether, this work points to the utility of brain TRM in cancer immunoprevention, supporting the development of antitumor mRNA-LNP vaccines to bolster brain immunity.
Madison R. Mix, Cassie M. Sievers, Mariah Hassert, Shravan Kumar Kannan, Lecia L. Pewe, Sunny C. Huang, Rui He, Cori E. Fain, Mohammad Heidarian, Lisa S. Hancox, Sahaana A. Arumugam, Terry G. Beltz, Fang Jin, Aaron J. Johnson, Calvin S. Carter, Noah S. Butler, Aliasger K. Salem, Vladimir P. Badovinac, John T. Harty