- Nelson, Maxine;
- Liu, Peng;
- Agrawal, Ayushi;
- Yip, Oscar;
- Blumenfeld, Jessica;
- Traglia, Michela;
- Kim, Min;
- Koutsodendris, Nicole;
- Rao, Antara;
- Grone, Brian;
- Hao, Yanxia;
- Yoon, Seo;
- Xu, Qin;
- De Leon, Samuel;
- Choenyi, Tenzing;
- Thomas, Reuben;
- Lopera, Francisco;
- Quiroz, Yakeel;
- Arboleda-Velasquez, Joseph;
- Reiman, Eric;
- Mahley, Robert;
- Huang, Yadong
Apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) is the strongest genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimers disease (LOAD), leading to earlier age of clinical onset and exacerbating pathologies. There is a critical need to identify protective targets. Recently, a rare APOE variant, APOE3-R136S (Christchurch), was found to protect against early-onset AD in a PSEN1-E280A carrier. In this study, we sought to determine if the R136S mutation also protects against APOE4-driven effects in LOAD. We generated tauopathy mouse and human iPSC-derived neuron models carrying human APOE4 with the homozygous or heterozygous R136S mutation. We found that the homozygous R136S mutation rescued APOE4-driven Tau pathology, neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation. The heterozygous R136S mutation partially protected against APOE4-driven neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation but not Tau pathology. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing revealed that the APOE4-R136S mutation increased disease-protective and diminished disease-associated cell populations in a gene dose-dependent manner. Thus, the APOE-R136S mutation protects against APOE4-driven AD pathologies, providing a target for therapeutic development against AD.