Awardee OrganizationCOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is a major aging-related neurological disorder that afflicts roughly 5.3 million
Americans, with total US annual costs of ~ $226 billion. Despite intensive efforts to characterize the regulation
of pathological processes of AD, particularly the generation of -amyloid plaques, current interventions aimed at
blocking -amyloid aggregation have only modest effects on clinical symptoms, suggesting that new approaches
to find risk factors independent of -amyloid aggregation should be investigated, particularly to identify proximal
causes of the disease. Genetic studies in model organisms have demonstrated that evolutionarily conserved
pathways modulate aging, and interventions that target these pathways can dramatically extend mammalian
healthspan and lifespan. C. elegans has been at the forefront of model organism longevity studies, revealing
new genes, pathways, and molecular mechanisms that regulate the rate of aging and age-related declines,
including cognitive decline. In parallel, Genome-wide association (GWAS) studies have implicated a role for
gene regulatory changes as a risk factor for AD. AD risk variants in gene regulatory regions may dysregulate
context-specific transcriptional outputs, contributing to susceptibility to AD independent of the regulation and
generation of -amyloid plaques. Our hypothesis is that by defining a cell’s gene regulatory networks during
aging and in genetically predisposed AD neuropathological states, it will be possible to both infer the
environmental signals the cell receives and explain its resulting program of gene expression. These age-
dependent transcriptional changes may be conserved in neurons across evolutionary time scales, and may
contribute to cognitive decline in the model system C. elegans, as well. We will leverage the strengths of this
model system (simple genetics, short lifespan, rapid aging, functional assays of learning and memory, and
transcriptional analysis of isolated neurons), combined with data from genomic and genetic studies of AD and
experimental results from human neuronal cells, to identify shared gene regulatory networks that may contribute
to the susceptibility to AD. These genes and gene networks will provide important new targets for pharmaceutical
interventions for the onset and progression of Alzheimer’s Disease.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
The loss of cognitive function with the onset of dementia, and in particular Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), is one of
the most devastating, expensive, and widespread consequences of aging and despite decades of research, at
this point, no preventions or cures have been developed for AD, and costs of caring for patients with AD have
risen with the US population’s rising average age. To identify potential new targets for therapeutic
intervention, we will combine information from human genome-wide association studies of AD, which indicate
that gene regulatory changes underlie genetic AD risk, with studies of the powerful genetic model system, C.
elegans, which we have shown to exhibit cognitive decline and evolutionarily conserved neuronal gene
expression. Using the tools we have developed to study learning and memory in worms and to identify gene
expression changes in worm neurons, we will identify genes that change with age that are also risk factors for
AD, and we will test those genes for their roles in learning and memory and its decline with age in both worms
and in human neuronal cells derived from AD patients, an approach t h a t will reveal new candidates for
therapeutic intervention for the treatment of AD.
No Sub Projects information available for 7RF1AG057341-03
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