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Dive into the research topics where Philipp A. Jaeger is active.

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Featured researches published by Philipp A. Jaeger.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

The autophagy-related protein beclin 1 shows reduced expression in early Alzheimer disease and regulates amyloid β accumulation in mice

Fiona Pickford; Eliezer Masliah; Markus Britschgi; Kurt M. Lucin; Ramya Narasimhan; Philipp A. Jaeger; Scott A. Small; Brian Spencer; Edward Rockenstein; Beth Levine; Tony Wyss-Coray

Autophagy is the principal cellular pathway for degradation of long-lived proteins and organelles and regulates cell fate in response to stress. Recently, autophagy has been implicated in neurodegeneration, but whether it is detrimental or protective remains unclear. Here we report that beclin 1, a protein with a key role in autophagy, was decreased in affected brain regions of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) early in the disease process. Heterozygous deletion of beclin 1 (Becn1) in mice decreased neuronal autophagy and resulted in neurodegeneration and disruption of lysosomes. In transgenic mice that express human amyloid precursor protein (APP), a model for AD, genetic reduction of Becn1 expression increased intraneuronal amyloid beta (Abeta) accumulation, extracellular Abeta deposition, and neurodegeneration and caused microglial changes and profound neuronal ultrastructural abnormalities. Administration of a lentiviral vector expressing beclin 1 reduced both intracellular and extracellular amyloid pathology in APP transgenic mice. We conclude that beclin 1 deficiency disrupts neuronal autophagy, modulates APP metabolism, and promotes neurodegeneration in mice and that increasing beclin 1 levels may have therapeutic potential in AD.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Regulation of amyloid precursor protein processing by the Beclin 1 complex.

Philipp A. Jaeger; Fiona Pickford; Chung-Huan Sun; Kurt M. Lucin; Eliezer Masliah; Tony Wyss-Coray

Autophagy is an intracellular degradation pathway that functions in protein and organelle turnover in response to starvation and cellular stress. Autophagy is initiated by the formation of a complex containing Beclin 1 (BECN1) and its binding partner Phosphoinositide-3-kinase, class 3 (PIK3C3). Recently, BECN1 deficiency was shown to enhance the pathology of a mouse model of Alzheimer Disease (AD). However, the mechanism by which BECN1 or autophagy mediate these effects are unknown. Here, we report that the levels of Amyloid precursor protein (APP) and its metabolites can be reduced through autophagy activation, indicating that they are a substrate for autophagy. Furthermore, we find that knockdown of Becn1 in cell culture increases the levels of APP and its metabolites. Accumulation of APP and APP C-terminal fragments (APP-CTF) are accompanied by impaired autophagosomal clearance. Pharmacological inhibition of autophagosomal-lysosomal degradation causes a comparable accumulation of APP and APP-metabolites in autophagosomes. Becn1 reduction in cell culture leads to lower levels of its binding partner Pik3c3 and increased presence of Microtubule-associated protein 1, light chain 3 (LC3). Overexpression of Becn1, on the other hand, reduces cellular APP levels. In line with these observations, we detected less BECN1 and PIK3C3 but more LC3 protein in brains of AD patients. We conclude that BECN1 regulates APP processing and turnover. BECN1 is involved in autophagy initiation and autophagosome clearance. Accordingly, BECN1 deficiency disrupts cellular autophagy and autophagosomal-lysosomal degradation and alters APP metabolism. Together, our findings suggest that autophagy and the BECN1-PIK3C3 complex regulate APP processing and play an important role in AD pathology.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2009

All-you-can-eat: autophagy in neurodegeneration and neuroprotection

Philipp A. Jaeger; Tony Wyss-Coray

Autophagy is the major pathway involved in the degradation of proteins and organelles, cellular remodeling, and survival during nutrient starvation. Autophagosomal dysfunction has been implicated in an increasing number of diseases from cancer to bacterial and viral infections and more recently in neurodegeneration. While a decrease in autophagic activity appears to interfere with protein degradation and possibly organelle turnover, increased autophagy has been shown to facilitate the clearance of aggregation-prone proteins and promote neuronal survival in a number of disease models. On the other hand, too much autophagic activity can be detrimental as well and lead to cell death, suggesting the regulation of autophagy has an important role in cell fate decisions. An increasing number of model systems are now available to study the role of autophagy in the central nervous system and how it might be exploited to treat disease. We will review here the current knowledge of autophagy in the central nervous system and provide an overview of the various models that have been used to study acute and chronic neurodegeneration.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2013

TDP-43 frontotemporal lobar degeneration and autoimmune disease

Zachary A. Miller; Katherine P. Rankin; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Leonel T. Takada; Virginia E. Sturm; Clare M. Cleveland; Lindsey A. Criswell; Philipp A. Jaeger; Trisha Stan; Kristin Heggeli; Sandy Chan Hsu; Anna Karydas; Baber Khan; Lea T. Grinberg; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini; Adam L. Boxer; Howard J. Rosen; Joel H. Kramer; Giovanni Coppola; Daniel H. Geschwind; Rosa Rademakers; William W. Seeley; Tony Wyss-Coray; Bruce L. Miller

Background The aetiology and pathogenesis of non-genetic forms of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is unknown and even with the genetic forms of FTD, pathogenesis remains elusive. Given the association between systemic inflammation and other neurodegenerative processes, links between autoimmunity and FTD need to be explored. Objective To describe the prevalence of systemic autoimmune disease in semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA), a clinical cohort, and in progranulin (PGRN) mutation carriers compared with neurologically healthy normal controls (NC) and Alzheimers disease (AD) as dementia controls. Design Case control. Setting Academic medical centres. Participants 129 svPPA, 39 PGRN, 186 NC and 158 AD patients underwent chart review for autoimmune conditions. A large subset of svPPA, PGRN and NC cohorts underwent serum analysis for tumour necrosis factor α (TNF-α) levels. Outcome measures χ2 Comparison of autoimmune prevalence and follow-up logistic regression. Results There was a significantly increased risk of autoimmune disorders clustered around inflammatory arthritides, cutaneous disorders and gastrointestinal conditions in the svPPA and PGRN cohorts. Elevated TNF-α levels were observed in svPPA and PGRN compared with NC. Conclusions svPPA and PGRN are associated with increased prevalence of specific and related autoimmune diseases compared with NC and AD. These findings suggest a unique pattern of systemic inflammation in svPPA and PGRN and open new research avenues for understanding and treating disorders associated with underlying transactive response DNA-binding protein 43 aggregation.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

ALK5-dependent TGF-β signaling is a major determinant of late-stage adult neurogenesis

Yingbo He; Hui Zhang; Andrea Yung; Saul A. Villeda; Philipp A. Jaeger; Oluwatobi Olayiwola; Nina Fainberg; Tony Wyss-Coray

The transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling pathway serves critical functions in CNS development, but, apart from its proposed neuroprotective actions, its physiological role in the adult brain is unclear. We observed a prominent activation of TGF-β signaling in the adult dentate gyrus and expression of downstream Smad proteins in this neurogenic zone. Consistent with a function of TGF-β signaling in adult neurogenesis, genetic deletion of the TGF-β receptor ALK5 reduced the number, migration and dendritic arborization of newborn neurons. Conversely, constitutive activation of neuronal ALK5 in forebrain caused a marked increase in these aspects of neurogenesis and was associated with higher expression of c-Fos in newborn neurons and with stronger memory function. Our findings describe an unexpected role for ALK5-dependent TGF-β signaling as a regulator of the late stages of adult hippocampal neurogenesis, which may have implications for changes in neurogenesis during aging and disease.


JAMA Neurology | 2010

Beclin 1 Complex in Autophagy and Alzheimer Disease

Philipp A. Jaeger; Tony Wyss-Coray

Beclin 1 is a protein involved in the regulation of autophagy and has been shown to be reduced in patients with Alzheimer disease. This review summarizes the current research data that link disturbances in autophagy, a cellular degradation and maintenance pathway, to the development of Alzheimer disease and related neurodegenerative diseases. It also provides a brief overview of the existing pharmacological interventions available to modulate autophagy activity in mammalian cells.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2016

Network-Driven Plasma Proteomics Expose Molecular Changes in the Alzheimer's Brain

Philipp A. Jaeger; Kurt M. Lucin; Markus Britschgi; Badri N. Vardarajan; Ruo-Pan Huang; Elizabeth D. Kirby; Rachelle J. Abbey; Bradley F. Boeve; Adam L. Boxer; Lindsay A. Farrer; NiCole Finch; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Elizabeth Head; Matan Hoffree; Ruochun Huang; Hudson Johns; Anna Karydas; David S. Knopman; Andrey Loboda; Eliezer Masliah; Ramya Narasimhan; Ronald C. Petersen; Alexei A. Podtelezhnikov; Suraj Pradhan; Rosa Rademakers; Chung-Huan Sun; Steven G. Younkin; Bruce L. Miller; Trey Ideker; Tony Wyss-Coray

BackgroundBiological pathways that significantly contribute to sporadic Alzheimer’s disease are largely unknown and cannot be observed directly. Cognitive symptoms appear only decades after the molecular disease onset, further complicating analyses. As a consequence, molecular research is often restricted to late-stage post-mortem studies of brain tissue. However, the disease process is expected to trigger numerous cellular signaling pathways and modulate the local and systemic environment, and resulting changes in secreted signaling molecules carry information about otherwise inaccessible pathological processes.ResultsTo access this information we probed relative levels of close to 600 secreted signaling proteins from patients’ blood samples using antibody microarrays and mapped disease-specific molecular networks. Using these networks as seeds we then employed independent genome and transcriptome data sets to corroborate potential pathogenic pathways.ConclusionsWe identified Growth-Differentiation Factor (GDF) signaling as a novel Alzheimer’s disease-relevant pathway supported by in vivo and in vitro follow-up experiments, demonstrating the existence of a highly informative link between cellular pathology and changes in circulatory signaling proteins.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Development of ultra-high-density screening tools for microbial "omics".

Gordon J. Bean; Philipp A. Jaeger; Sondra Bahr; Trey Ideker

High-throughput genetic screens in model microbial organisms are a primary means of interrogating biological systems. In numerous cases, such screens have identified the genes that underlie a particular phenotype or a set of gene-gene, gene-environment or protein-protein interactions, which are then used to construct highly informative network maps for biological research. However, the potential test space of genes, proteins, or interactions is typically much larger than current screening systems can address. To push the limits of screening technology, we developed an ultra-high-density, 6144-colony arraying system and analysis toolbox. Using budding yeast as a benchmark, we find that these tools boost genetic screening throughput 4-fold and yield significant cost and time reductions at quality levels equal to or better than current methods. Thus, the new ultra-high-density screening tools enable researchers to significantly increase the size and scope of their genetic screens.


Cell | 2012

Modeling Transcriptome Dynamics in a Complex World

Philipp A. Jaeger; Colleen J. Doherty; Trey Ideker

An accurate prediction of how extrinsic stimuli influence changes in gene expression has been challenging. In this issue, Nagano and colleagues successfully model genome-wide mRNA expression changes under variable environmental conditions in rice, raising hopes that scientists will soon be able to predict genome-wide transcriptional responses in a variety of organisms in uncontrolled real-world settings.


bioRxiv | 2016

Cytokine and Leukocyte Profiling Reveal Pro-Inflammatory and Autoimmune Features in Frontotemporal Dementia Patients

Philipp A. Jaeger; Trisha Stan; Eva Czirr; Markus Britschgi; Daniela Berdnik; Ruo-Pan Huang; Bradley F. Boeve; Adam L. Boxer; NiCole Finch; Gabriela K. Fragiadakis; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Ruochun Huang; Hudson Johns; Anna Karydas; David S. Knopman; Michael D. Leipold; Holden T. Maecker; Zachary A. Miller; Ronald C. Petersen; Rosa Rademakers; Chung-Huan Sun; Steve Younkin; Bruce L. Miller; Tony Wyss-Coray

The growing link between systemic environment and brain function opens the possibility that cellular communication and composition in blood are correlated with brain health. We tested this concept in frontotemporal dementia with novel, unbiased tools that measure hundreds of soluble signaling proteins or characterize the vast immune cell repertoire in blood. With these tools we discovered complementary abnormalities indicative of abnormal T cell populations and autoimmunity in frontotemporal dementia.

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Trey Ideker

University of California

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Adam L. Boxer

University of California

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Anna Karydas

University of California

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