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Content Provider | Springer Nature Link |
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Author | Koss, Dave J. Robinson, Lianne Mietelska Porowska, Anna Gasiorowska, Anna Sepčić, Kristina Turk, Tom Jaspars, Marcel Niewiadomska, Grazyna Scott, Roderick H. Platt, Bettina Riedel, Gert |
Copyright Year | 2015 |
Abstract | Patients suffering from tauopathies including frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) present with intra-neuronal aggregation of microtubule-associated protein Tau. During the disease process, Tau undergoes excessive phosphorylation, dissociates from microtubules and aggregates into insoluble neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), accumulating in the soma. While many aspects of the disease pathology have been replicated in transgenic mouse models, a region-specific non-transgenic expression model is missing. Complementing existing models, we here report a novel region-specific approach to modelling Tau pathology. Local co-administration of the pore-former polymeric 1,3-alkylpyridinium salts (Poly-APS) extracted from marine sponges, and synthetic full-length 4R recombinant human Tau (hTau) was performed in vitro and in vivo. At low doses, Poly-APS was non-toxic and cultured cells exposed to Poly-APS (0.5 µg/ml) and hTau (1 µg/ml; ~22 µM) had normal input resistance, resting-state membrane potentials and Ca2+ transients induced either by glutamate or KCl, as did cells exposed to a low concentration of the phosphatase inhibitor Okadaic acid (OA; 1 nM, 24 h). Combined hTau loading and phosphatase inhibition resulted in a collapse of the membrane potential, suppressed excitation and diminished glutamate and KCl-stimulated Ca2+ transients. Stereotaxic infusions of Poly-APS (0.005 µg/ml) and hTau (1 µg/ml) bilaterally into the dorsal hippocampus at multiple sites resulted in hTau loading of neurons in rats. A separate cohort received an additional 7-day minipump infusion of OA (1.2 nM) intrahippocampally. When tested 2 weeks after surgery, rats treated with Poly-APS+hTau+OA presented with subtle learning deficits, but were also impaired in cognitive flexibility and recall. Hippocampal plasticity recorded from slices ex vivo was diminished in Poly-APS+hTau+OA subjects, but not in other treatment groups. Histological sections confirmed the intracellular accumulation of hTau in CA1 pyramidal cells and along their processes; phosphorylated Tau was present only within somata. This study demonstrates that cognitive, physiological and pathological symptoms reminiscent of tauopathies can be induced following non-mutant hTau delivery into CA1 in rats, but functional consequences hinge on increased Tau phosphorylation. Collectively, these data validate a novel model of locally infused recombinant hTau protein as an inducer of Tau pathology in the hippocampus of normal rats; future studies will provide insights into the pathological spread and maturation of Tau pathology. |
Starting Page | 4613 |
Ending Page | 4632 |
Page Count | 20 |
File Format | |
ISSN | 1420682X |
Journal | Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences |
Volume Number | 72 |
Issue Number | 23 |
e-ISSN | 14209071 |
Language | English |
Publisher | Springer International Publishing |
Publisher Date | 2015-06-13 |
Publisher Place | Cham |
Access Restriction | Subscribed |
Subject Keyword | Alzheimer’s disease Frontotemporal dementia Tauopathies Phospho-Tau Poly-APS Tau LTP Calcium Cell Biology Biomedicine general Life Sciences Biochemistry |
Content Type | Text |
Resource Type | Article |
Subject | Cell Biology Molecular Biology Molecular Medicine Pharmacology Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience |
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