Single-cell multi-omic profiling allows the dissection of peripheral immune phenotypes in Alzheimer’s Disease progression

Autor/innen

  • Jannis B. Spintge
  • Karola Mai
  • Caterina Carraro
  • Martina van Uelft
  • Francesco Elli
  • Karoline Mauer
  • Lisa Holsten
  • Aleksej Frolov
  • Janice Elangikal
  • Emily Hinkley
  • Jonas Schulte-Schrepping
  • Mehrnoush H. Shakiba
  • Laura Lang
  • Tarek Elmzzahi
  • Doaa Hamada
  • Sophie Müller
  • Yuanfang Li
  • Ioanna Gemünd
  • Charlotte Kröger
  • Jacqueline Leidner
  • Timo Zajac
  • Jessica V. Montgomery
  • Celia Hartmann
  • Bidour Hussein
  • Maren Büttner
  • Rainer Knoll
  • Dina Hüsson
  • Rebekka Scholz
  • Tobias Paschek
  • Victoria Isakzai
  • Nico Reusch
  • Stefan Paulusch
  • Anna Drews
  • Michael Kraut
  • Heidi Theis
  • Marie Rüthing
  • Ulrike Strube
  • Lukas Preis
  • Daria Gref
  • Eike J. Spruth
  • Maria Gemenetzi
  • Klaus Fliessbach
  • Niels Hansen
  • Ayda Rostamzadeh
  • Wenzel Glanz
  • Enise I. Incesoy
  • Daniel Janowitz
  • Sophia Stöcklein
  • Boris-Stephan Rauchmann
  • Ingo Kilimann
  • Doreen Goerss
  • Sebastian Sodenkamp
  • Marie Kronmüller
  • Sandra Roeske
  • Anna Gamez
  • Matthias Schmid
  • Katharina Bürger
  • Julian Hellmann-Regen
  • Christoph Laske
  • Alfredo Ramirez
  • Frederic Brosseron
  • Jens Wiltfang
  • Robert Perneczky
  • Emrah Düzel
  • Stefan Teipel
  • Annika Spottke
  • Gabor C. Petzold
  • Oliver Peters
  • Josef Priller
  • Susanne V. Schmidt
  • Michael Wagner
  • Luca Kleineidam
  • Frank Jessen
  • Anja Schneider
  • Lorenzo Bonaguro
  • Elena De Domenico
  • Anna C. Aschenbrenner
  • Matthias Becker
  • Thomas Ulas
  • Joachim L. Schultze
  • Marc D. Beyer

Journal

  • medRxiv

Quellenangabe

  • medRxiv

Zusammenfassung

  • The role of the peripheral immune system in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) remains insufficiently resolved, limiting the understanding of systemic disease effects and mechanisms. Here, we employed three high-resolution single-cell techniques, including flow cytometry, single-cell RNA- and ATAC-sequencing, to investigate peripheral immunity in AD dementia and earlier stages of the AD trajectory in over 100 patients. We identified reduced humoral immune responses in AD, characterized by a diminished B cell compartment displaying an impaired activation phenotype. Classical monocytes expanded in mild cognitive impairment and early AD dementia, acquiring a NF-kB/AP-1-mediated low-grade inflammation phenotype. Our findings link peripheral dysregulation in innate and adaptive immunity at cell frequency, transcriptional and epigenetic levels to the AD trajectory and provide insights into distinct phenotypes that define AD progression in contrast to healthy aging across cohorts.


DOI

doi:10.64898/2026.03.12.26348228