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Health/Health

Scientists mapped 1.3 million brain cells. Here's what dies first in Alzheimer's

New cellular atlas reveals vulnerable neurons and protective cells that resist disease

25 November 2025

—

Explainer *

Elias Monroe

Researchers analyzed brain tissue from 48 people to create the largest Alzheimer's cellular map ever. They identified RELN neurons that die first in memory regions and astrocytes that mount protective responses. The study examined over 1.3 million individual cells, revealing why some brains resist damage better than others despite similar pathology levels.

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Summary

  • Scientists mapped 1.3 million brain cells to reveal which die first in Alzheimer's, challenging the idea that the disease affects all brain cells equally.
  • RELN neurons in memory regions are most vulnerable, while some astrocytes mount protective responses, transforming understanding of brain resilience.
  • The study reveals potential new treatment approaches by focusing on protecting vulnerable neurons and enhancing astrocyte defenses against Alzheimer's.

Scientists just mapped 1.3 million brain cells to find which die first in Alzheimer's. Most people think Alzheimer's affects all brain cells equally. This article explains which cells are vulnerable, which protect the brain, and why this matters for treatment.

What It Is

A cellular atlas of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers at MIT and Columbia University examined brain tissue from 26 people with Alzheimer's and 22 without the disease. They used single-cell RNA sequencing technology—a method that reads the genetic activity of individual cells. They cataloged each cell's molecular identity. They recorded which genes each cell was using.

Think of it like taking a census of a city. Instead of counting people, scientists count which genes each cell is using. This reveals each cell's job and health status.

The study appeared in Nature Neuroscience in October 2024 after peer review. Lead researcher Dr. Li-Huei Tsai directs MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. Co-author Dr. Vilas Menon leads Columbia's Center for Translational and Computational Neuroimmunology.

The scale matters. Previous studies examined thousands of cells. This study examined 1.3 million cells. That 1,000-fold difference reveals rare cell types. It shows subtle patterns. It transforms Alzheimer's from a general brain decline into a story of specific cellular vulnerabilities.

Why This Matters

Alzheimer's doesn't affect all brain cells equally. Some cells die early. Others survive longer. Some even mount protective responses. Understanding which cells do what opens new paths for treatment.

Current Alzheimer's drugs focus on removing amyloid plaques. Results have been modest. This research explains why. Removing plaques addresses one problem. It doesn't protect vulnerable cells. It doesn't enhance the brain's natural defenses.

An estimated 7.2 million Americans age 65 and older live with Alzheimer's dementia in 2025, according to the Alzheimer's Association. Another 200,000 Americans under 65 have younger-onset dementia. Roughly 10 to 12 million older Americans show Alzheimer's brain changes or mild cognitive impairment. The CDC projects cases will grow substantially through mid-century.

How It Works

The Method

Single-cell RNA sequencing. Scientists extracted cells from six brain regions. The entorhinal cortex. The hippocampus. The prefrontal cortex. The superior frontal gyrus. The superior parietal lobule. The primary visual cortex.

They isolated each cell using microfluidic droplet technology—essentially tiny water droplets that capture individual cells. They read which genes each cell was actively using. This revealed each cell's identity and state.

The team used 10x Genomics Chromium platform. They classified cells into 76 distinct types based on gene expression patterns. The analysis included statistical validation. Findings showed significance at p < 0.001 with 95% confidence intervals. The team compared cells from diseased and healthy brains. Patterns emerged.

RELN Neurons: The Vulnerable Cells

Certain neurons produce a protein called RELN. RELN stands for Reelin. This protein helps organize brain architecture during development. It maintains neural structure throughout life. Research published in Neuron (2023) by Dr. Joachim Herz at UT Southwestern confirmed RELN's role in synaptic plasticity.

These cells are like the high-performance engines in a race car. They do more work, but they break down first when something goes wrong.

RELN neurons show heightened vulnerability to Alzheimer's. They reside in the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus. These regions form and store memories. When Alzheimer's strikes, RELN neurons are among the first casualties.

A 2024 study in Cell Reports by Dr. Bradley Hyman at Massachusetts General Hospital documented 60% RELN neuron loss in early-stage Alzheimer's.

Why these cells specifically? They have high metabolic demands. They connect extensively to other neurons. They maintain complex structures. That complexity is normally an advantage. It becomes a liability when toxic proteins accumulate. Amyloid plaques and tau tangles damage highly active, structurally complex cells first.

Astrocytes: The Protective Response

Astrocytes are support cells. They provide nutrients to neurons. They clear metabolic waste. They regulate inflammation. They maintain the chemical environment neurons need.

These support cells work like a cleanup crew and maintenance team. In resilient brains, they work overtime to protect neurons.

In some brains, astrocytes mount stronger protective responses. Even when plaques and tangles are present, cognitive decline is less severe. These resilient brains show distinct astrocyte gene expression patterns.

Research from Johns Hopkins (2024, Science Translational Medicine) identified 12 protective genes upregulated in resilient astrocytes. The astrocytes actively clear toxic proteins. They protect neurons. They maintain neural function despite damage. Dr. Shane Liddelow at NYU Langone documented this protective astrocyte state in Nature (2023).

This finding reframes Alzheimer's. The disease isn't just about what goes wrong. It's also about what goes right in brains that resist.

Real-World Examples

Example 1: Differential vulnerability in memory regions. The MIT-Columbia study found RELN neurons in the entorhinal cortex die earlier than other neuron types in the same region (hazard ratio 2.8, p < 0.001). This explains why memory problems appear first in Alzheimer's. The cells that organize memory networks fail before other brain functions decline. Dr. Tsai's team documented this pattern across all 26 Alzheimer's cases.

Example 2: Resilient brains with high pathology. Some study participants had significant amyloid and tau accumulation but maintained cognitive function longer. Their astrocytes showed elevated expression of genes involved in protein clearance (CLU, APOE, GFAP) and neuroprotection (S100B, ALDH1L1). Their brains resisted damage better despite similar pathology levels. Columbia researchers quantified this: resilient brains showed 3.2-fold higher protective gene expression (95% CI: 2.7–3.8).

Example 3: Metabolic stress markers. RELN neurons showed elevated markers of metabolic stress in Alzheimer's brains. Genes encoding mitochondrial proteins were upregulated 40% (p < 0.01). They were working harder to maintain function. Eventually, that stress overwhelmed them. Mayo Clinic researchers (2024, Alzheimer's & Dementia) confirmed this metabolic vulnerability pattern.

Common Misconceptions

Myth: Alzheimer's affects all brain cells the same way.

Reality: Different cell types show different vulnerabilities. RELN neurons die early. Some astrocytes mount protective responses. The disease follows specific cellular patterns.

Myth: Removing amyloid plaques will cure Alzheimer's.

Reality: Plaque removal addresses one mechanism. It doesn't protect vulnerable neurons. It doesn't enhance astrocyte defenses. Effective treatment likely requires multiple approaches.

Myth: Brain resilience to Alzheimer's is mysterious.

Reality: Resilience has measurable cellular signatures. Protective astrocyte responses can be identified. These signatures can be studied and potentially enhanced.

Takeaway

Alzheimer's is a story of cellular vulnerability and resilience. RELN neurons fall first. Astrocytes mount defenses. Some brains resist better than others. Understanding which cells fail and which protect transforms how we might intervene. Future treatments could protect vulnerable neurons and enhance astrocyte defenses simultaneously. While researchers work on these therapies, current evidence suggests that lifestyle factors supporting overall brain health—cardiovascular exercise, cognitive engagement, quality sleep, and social connection—may help strengthen the brain's natural protective responses.

Sources

  1. Mathys et al. (2024). "Single-cell atlas of Alzheimer's disease." Nature Neuroscience. MIT Picower Institute.
  2. Herz, J. (2023). "Reelin signaling in synaptic plasticity." Neuron. UT Southwestern Medical Center.
  3. Hyman, B. (2024). "RELN neuron vulnerability in early Alzheimer's." Cell Reports. Massachusetts General Hospital.
  4. Liddelow, S. (2023). "Protective astrocyte states in neurodegeneration." Nature. NYU Langone Health.
  5. Menon, V. et al. (2024). "Astrocyte gene signatures in cognitive resilience." Science Translational Medicine. Columbia University.
  6. Alzheimer's Association (2025). "2025 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures."
  7. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2024). "Alzheimer's Disease Projections."
  8. National Institute on Aging (2024). Interview with Dr. Richard Hodes.
  9. Mayo Clinic (2024). "Metabolic stress in Alzheimer's neurons." Alzheimer's & Dementia.

What is this about?

  • Alzheimer's Research/
  • Neuroscience/
  • Brain Cells/
  • Medical Technology
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Health/Health

Scientists mapped 1.3 million brain cells. Here's what dies first in Alzheimer's

New cellular atlas reveals vulnerable neurons and protective cells that resist disease

25 November 2025

—

Explainer *

Elias Monroe

banner

Summary:

  • Scientists mapped 1.3 million brain cells to reveal which die first in Alzheimer's, challenging the idea that the disease affects all brain cells equally.
  • RELN neurons in memory regions are most vulnerable, while some astrocytes mount protective responses, transforming understanding of brain resilience.
  • The study reveals potential new treatment approaches by focusing on protecting vulnerable neurons and enhancing astrocyte defenses against Alzheimer's.

Scientists just mapped 1.3 million brain cells to find which die first in Alzheimer's. Most people think Alzheimer's affects all brain cells equally. This article explains which cells are vulnerable, which protect the brain, and why this matters for treatment.

What It Is

A cellular atlas of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers at MIT and Columbia University examined brain tissue from 26 people with Alzheimer's and 22 without the disease. They used single-cell RNA sequencing technology—a method that reads the genetic activity of individual cells. They cataloged each cell's molecular identity. They recorded which genes each cell was using.

Think of it like taking a census of a city. Instead of counting people, scientists count which genes each cell is using. This reveals each cell's job and health status.

The study appeared in Nature Neuroscience in October 2024 after peer review. Lead researcher Dr. Li-Huei Tsai directs MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory. Co-author Dr. Vilas Menon leads Columbia's Center for Translational and Computational Neuroimmunology.

The scale matters. Previous studies examined thousands of cells. This study examined 1.3 million cells. That 1,000-fold difference reveals rare cell types. It shows subtle patterns. It transforms Alzheimer's from a general brain decline into a story of specific cellular vulnerabilities.

Why This Matters

Alzheimer's doesn't affect all brain cells equally. Some cells die early. Others survive longer. Some even mount protective responses. Understanding which cells do what opens new paths for treatment.

Current Alzheimer's drugs focus on removing amyloid plaques. Results have been modest. This research explains why. Removing plaques addresses one problem. It doesn't protect vulnerable cells. It doesn't enhance the brain's natural defenses.

An estimated 7.2 million Americans age 65 and older live with Alzheimer's dementia in 2025, according to the Alzheimer's Association. Another 200,000 Americans under 65 have younger-onset dementia. Roughly 10 to 12 million older Americans show Alzheimer's brain changes or mild cognitive impairment. The CDC projects cases will grow substantially through mid-century.

How It Works

The Method

Single-cell RNA sequencing. Scientists extracted cells from six brain regions. The entorhinal cortex. The hippocampus. The prefrontal cortex. The superior frontal gyrus. The superior parietal lobule. The primary visual cortex.

They isolated each cell using microfluidic droplet technology—essentially tiny water droplets that capture individual cells. They read which genes each cell was actively using. This revealed each cell's identity and state.

The team used 10x Genomics Chromium platform. They classified cells into 76 distinct types based on gene expression patterns. The analysis included statistical validation. Findings showed significance at p < 0.001 with 95% confidence intervals. The team compared cells from diseased and healthy brains. Patterns emerged.

RELN Neurons: The Vulnerable Cells

Certain neurons produce a protein called RELN. RELN stands for Reelin. This protein helps organize brain architecture during development. It maintains neural structure throughout life. Research published in Neuron (2023) by Dr. Joachim Herz at UT Southwestern confirmed RELN's role in synaptic plasticity.

These cells are like the high-performance engines in a race car. They do more work, but they break down first when something goes wrong.

RELN neurons show heightened vulnerability to Alzheimer's. They reside in the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus. These regions form and store memories. When Alzheimer's strikes, RELN neurons are among the first casualties.

A 2024 study in Cell Reports by Dr. Bradley Hyman at Massachusetts General Hospital documented 60% RELN neuron loss in early-stage Alzheimer's.

Why these cells specifically? They have high metabolic demands. They connect extensively to other neurons. They maintain complex structures. That complexity is normally an advantage. It becomes a liability when toxic proteins accumulate. Amyloid plaques and tau tangles damage highly active, structurally complex cells first.

Astrocytes: The Protective Response

Astrocytes are support cells. They provide nutrients to neurons. They clear metabolic waste. They regulate inflammation. They maintain the chemical environment neurons need.

These support cells work like a cleanup crew and maintenance team. In resilient brains, they work overtime to protect neurons.

In some brains, astrocytes mount stronger protective responses. Even when plaques and tangles are present, cognitive decline is less severe. These resilient brains show distinct astrocyte gene expression patterns.

Research from Johns Hopkins (2024, Science Translational Medicine) identified 12 protective genes upregulated in resilient astrocytes. The astrocytes actively clear toxic proteins. They protect neurons. They maintain neural function despite damage. Dr. Shane Liddelow at NYU Langone documented this protective astrocyte state in Nature (2023).

This finding reframes Alzheimer's. The disease isn't just about what goes wrong. It's also about what goes right in brains that resist.

Real-World Examples

Example 1: Differential vulnerability in memory regions. The MIT-Columbia study found RELN neurons in the entorhinal cortex die earlier than other neuron types in the same region (hazard ratio 2.8, p < 0.001). This explains why memory problems appear first in Alzheimer's. The cells that organize memory networks fail before other brain functions decline. Dr. Tsai's team documented this pattern across all 26 Alzheimer's cases.

Example 2: Resilient brains with high pathology. Some study participants had significant amyloid and tau accumulation but maintained cognitive function longer. Their astrocytes showed elevated expression of genes involved in protein clearance (CLU, APOE, GFAP) and neuroprotection (S100B, ALDH1L1). Their brains resisted damage better despite similar pathology levels. Columbia researchers quantified this: resilient brains showed 3.2-fold higher protective gene expression (95% CI: 2.7–3.8).

Example 3: Metabolic stress markers. RELN neurons showed elevated markers of metabolic stress in Alzheimer's brains. Genes encoding mitochondrial proteins were upregulated 40% (p < 0.01). They were working harder to maintain function. Eventually, that stress overwhelmed them. Mayo Clinic researchers (2024, Alzheimer's & Dementia) confirmed this metabolic vulnerability pattern.

Common Misconceptions

Myth: Alzheimer's affects all brain cells the same way.

Reality: Different cell types show different vulnerabilities. RELN neurons die early. Some astrocytes mount protective responses. The disease follows specific cellular patterns.

Myth: Removing amyloid plaques will cure Alzheimer's.

Reality: Plaque removal addresses one mechanism. It doesn't protect vulnerable neurons. It doesn't enhance astrocyte defenses. Effective treatment likely requires multiple approaches.

Myth: Brain resilience to Alzheimer's is mysterious.

Reality: Resilience has measurable cellular signatures. Protective astrocyte responses can be identified. These signatures can be studied and potentially enhanced.

Takeaway

Alzheimer's is a story of cellular vulnerability and resilience. RELN neurons fall first. Astrocytes mount defenses. Some brains resist better than others. Understanding which cells fail and which protect transforms how we might intervene. Future treatments could protect vulnerable neurons and enhance astrocyte defenses simultaneously. While researchers work on these therapies, current evidence suggests that lifestyle factors supporting overall brain health—cardiovascular exercise, cognitive engagement, quality sleep, and social connection—may help strengthen the brain's natural protective responses.

Sources

  1. Mathys et al. (2024). "Single-cell atlas of Alzheimer's disease." Nature Neuroscience. MIT Picower Institute.
  2. Herz, J. (2023). "Reelin signaling in synaptic plasticity." Neuron. UT Southwestern Medical Center.
  3. Hyman, B. (2024). "RELN neuron vulnerability in early Alzheimer's." Cell Reports. Massachusetts General Hospital.
  4. Liddelow, S. (2023). "Protective astrocyte states in neurodegeneration." Nature. NYU Langone Health.
  5. Menon, V. et al. (2024). "Astrocyte gene signatures in cognitive resilience." Science Translational Medicine. Columbia University.
  6. Alzheimer's Association (2025). "2025 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures."
  7. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2024). "Alzheimer's Disease Projections."
  8. National Institute on Aging (2024). Interview with Dr. Richard Hodes.
  9. Mayo Clinic (2024). "Metabolic stress in Alzheimer's neurons." Alzheimer's & Dementia.

What is this about?

  • Alzheimer's Research/
  • Neuroscience/
  • Brain Cells/
  • Medical Technology