1. Academic Validation
  2. Loss of neuronal lysosomal acid lipase drives amyloid pathology in Alzheimer's disease

Loss of neuronal lysosomal acid lipase drives amyloid pathology in Alzheimer's disease

  • bioRxiv. 2024 Jun 10:2024.06.09.596693. doi: 10.1101/2024.06.09.596693.
Alexandra M Barnett Lamar Dawkins Jian Zou Elizabeth McNair Viktoriya D Nikolova Sheryl S Moy Greg T Sutherland Julia Stevens Meagan Colie Kemi Katemboh Hope Kellner Corina Damian Sagan DeCastro Ryan P Vetreno Leon G Coleman
Abstract

Underlying drivers of late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) pathology remain unknown. However, multiple biologically diverse risk factors share a common pathological progression. To identify convergent molecular abnormalities that drive LOAD pathogenesis we compared two common midlife risk factors for LOAD, heavy alcohol use and obesity. This revealed that disrupted lipophagy is an underlying cause of LOAD pathogenesis. Both exposures reduced lysosomal flux, with a loss of neuronal lysosomal acid Lipase (LAL). This resulted in neuronal lysosomal lipid (NLL) accumulation, which opposed Aβ localization to lysosomes. Neuronal LAL loss both preceded (with aging) and promoted (targeted knockdown) Aβ pathology and cognitive deficits in AD mice. The addition of recombinant LAL ex vivo and neuronal LAL overexpression in vivo prevented amyloid increases and improved cognition. In WT mice, neuronal LAL declined with aging and correlated negatively with entorhinal Aβ. In healthy human brain, LAL also declined with age, suggesting this contributes to the age-related vulnerability for AD. In human LOAD LAL was further reduced, correlated negatively with Aβ 1-42 , and occurred with polymerase pausing at the LAL gene. Together, this finds that the loss of neuronal LAL promotes NLL accumulation to impede degradation of Aβ in neuronal lysosomes to drive AD amyloid pathology.

Summary: Cellular and molecular drivers of late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) are unknown, though several risk factors account for the majority of disease incidence 1-5 . Though diverse in their biological natures, each of these risk exposures converge on a shared pathological progression with the accumulation of amyloid early in the disease. Human genetic and transcriptomic studies suggest a role for altered lipid metabolism 6-9 , though the mechanism has been unknown. Here, using two common midlife risk exposures for LOAD, we found that dysfunctional lipophagy caused by the loss of lysosomal acid Lipase (LAL) promotes early LOAD pathogenesis. Both midlife obesity and heavy alcohol reduced neuronal LAL, causing an increase in neuronal lysosomal lipid, and a subsequent accumulation of Aβ in the extra-lysosomal cytosol. This loss of LAL preceded and promoted Aβ pathology and cognitive deficits in AD mice. The addition of recombinant LAL ex vivo and neuronal LAL overexpression in vivo prevented increases in amyloid and improved cognition. In human brain, LAL declined with age in healthy subjects, similar to rodents, showing robust losses in LOAD subjects with polymerase pausing. Together, this implicates neuronal LAL loss in LOAD pathogenesis and presents LAL as a promising diagnostic, preventative, and/or therapeutic target for AD.

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