Inflammatory reprogramming of human brain endothelial cells compromises blood–brain barrier integrity in Alzheimer’s disease
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Blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction is an early feature of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), yet the endothelial gene-regulatory programs involved remain incompletely understood. We integrate postmortem human single-nucleus transcriptomics with iPSC-based BBB models to define a conserved, inflammation-driven pathway that compromises barrier integrity. We identify an NF-κB-associated endothelial gene module endoM2 that is elevated in AD, inversely correlated with cognition, and enriched for inflammation and endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition signatures. Cytokine stimulation of iPSC-derived brain endothelial cells induces morphological remodeling, lipid accumulation, junctional disruption, and transcriptomic shifts that mirror endoM2. A targeted drug screen identifies the NF-κB inhibitor BAY11-7082 as protective against cytokine-induced changes. In our perfusable iPSC-derived BBB-Chip that recapitulates human BBB signatures, single-cell profiling reveals inflammatory endothelial state-specific programs reflecting those in AD brains and demonstrates that BAY11-7082 suppresses cytokine-triggered dysfunction and reverses inflammation-associated gene activation. Together, these findings position cerebrovascular inflammation as a therapeutic target to preserve BBB integrity in AD.