Abstract

A pathological pathway leading from soluble monomeric to insoluble filamentous Tau is characteristic of many human neurodegenerative diseases, which also exhibit dysfunction and death of brain cells. However, it is unknown how the assembly of Tau into filaments relates to cell loss. To study this, we first used a mouse line transgenic for full-length human mutant P301S Tau to investigate the temporal relationship between Tau assembly into filaments, assessed using anti-Tau antibody AT100, and motor neuron numbers, in the lumbar spinal cord. AT100 immunoreactivity preceded nerve cell loss. Murine Tau did not contribute significantly to either Tau aggregation or neurodegeneration. To further study the relevance of filament formation for neurodegeneration, we deleted hexapeptides 275VQIINK280 and 306VQIVYK311, either singly or in combination, from human 0N4R Tau with the P301S mutation. These hexapeptides are essential for the assembly of Tau into filaments. Homozygous mice transgenic for P301S Tau with the hexapeptide deletions, which expressed Tau at a similar level to the heterozygous line transgenic for P301S Tau, had a normal lifespan, unlike mice from the P301S Tau line. The latter had significant levels of sarkosyl-insoluble Tau in brain and spinal cord, and exhibited neurodegeneration. Mice transgenic for P301S Tau with the hexapeptide deletions failed to show significant levels of sarkosyl-insoluble Tau or neurodegeneration. Recombinant P301S Tau with the hexapeptide deletions failed to form β-sheet structure and filaments following incubation with heparin. Taken together, we conclude that β-sheet assembly of human P301S Tau is necessary for neurodegeneration in transgenic mice.

Highlights

  • The assembly of Tau protein into abnormal filaments characterises many human neurodegenerative diseases [16]

  • We report that AT100 immunoreactivity preceded nerve cell loss, with murine Tau playing no significant part

  • We show an inverse correlation between AT100 immunoreactivity and the number of motor neurons in the lumbar spinal cord of mice transgenic for human P301S Tau

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Summary

Introduction

The assembly of Tau protein into abnormal filaments characterises many human neurodegenerative diseases [16]. Six Tau isoforms are expressed in normal adult human brain – three isoforms with four microtubule-binding repeats each (R1, R2, R3, R4; 4R Tau) and three isoforms lacking R2 (3R Tau) [19]. We produced and characterised a transgenic mouse line, which expresses full-length human 0N4R P301S Tau, under the control of the murine Thy promoter [1]. It exhibits the essential characteristics of human Tauopathies, including Tau hyperphosphorylation, abundant Tau filaments in nerve cells and neurodegeneration

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