Abstract

Patients who recover from nosocomial pneumonia oftentimes exhibit long-lasting cognitive impairment comparable with what is observed in Alzheimer’s disease patients. We previously hypothesized that the lung endothelium contributes to infection-related neurocognitive dysfunction, because bacteria-exposed endothelial cells release a form(s) of cytotoxic tau that is sufficient to impair long-term potentiation in the hippocampus. However, the full-length lung and endothelial tau isoform(s) have yet to be resolved and it remains unclear whether the infection-induced endothelial cytotoxic tau triggers neuronal tau aggregation. Here, we demonstrate that lung endothelial cells express a big tau isoform and three additional tau isoforms that are similar to neuronal tau, each containing four microtubule-binding repeat domains, and that tau is expressed in lung capillaries in vivo. To test whether infection elicits endothelial tau capable of causing transmissible tau aggregation, the cells were infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The infection-induced tau released from endothelium into the medium-induced neuronal tau aggregation in reporter cells, including reporter cells that express either the four microtubule-binding repeat domains or the full-length tau. Infection-induced release of pathological tau variant(s) from endothelium, and the ability of the endothelial-derived tau to cause neuronal tau aggregation, was abolished in tau knockout cells. After bacterial lung infection, brain homogenates from WT mice, but not from tau knockout mice, initiated tau aggregation. Thus, we conclude that bacterial pneumonia initiates the release of lung endothelial-derived cytotoxic tau, which is capable of propagating a neuronal tauopathy.

Highlights

  • Neurofibrillary tau tangles are hallmark lesions found in the postmortem brains of patients who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias

  • To generate and identify the cDNA clones encoding tau isoforms in rat lung, we performed RT-PCR using rat lung tissue and primary pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (PMVECs)

  • Our results identified three rat lung tau isoforms that are reminiscent of the human tau isoform, and a big tau isoform known to be expressed in the periphery (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Neurofibrillary tau tangles are hallmark lesions found in the postmortem brains of patients who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. These tau aggregation findings are consistent with the results obtained using the FRET assay, our previous studies have further illustrated that neutralizing tau oligomers using the T22 antibody removes cytotoxins generated by endothelial cells [33, 34].

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