Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNumerous studies have shown that the extent of pathological tau protein in the brain correlates strongly with the severity of Alzheimer’s dementia at the time of death, and similar association with functional phenotypes have been seen in other tauopathies. In recent years, several dye‐based imaging probes with selectivity for tau aggregates have been developed. However, all are β‐sheet binders with varying affinity for different amyloids, and thereby lack specificity for tau lesions. In contrast, single domain antibodies (sdAbs) are specific for their target and because of their small size have much greater access into the brain than standard whole antibodies.MethodTo examine sdAbs’ suitability as non‐invasive in vivo imaging probes for tauopathies, we immunized a llama with a full‐length recombinant tau protein followed by boosters with human brain‐derived pathological tau proteins. Phage display libraries were generated from its peripheral blood mononuclear cells and screened for binding to tau proteins using various assays, resulting in a prototype sdAb deemed promising for in vivo imaging. Subsequently, this anti‐tau sdAb was labeled with a near‐infrared tag (680 nm), and injected intravenously in tauopathy and control mice, followed by imaging using an In Vivo Imaging System (IVIS). After the imaging, brains were extracted for tissue analysis.ResultIntravenous injection of labeled sdAb resulted in a strong in vivo brain signal detected through the intact head in two different models of transgenic tauopathy mice, but not in wild‐type or transgenic α‐synucleinopathy mice. Importantly, the in vivo brain signal correlated strongly with insoluble (r = 0.9839, p < 0.0001) and soluble (human tau (CP27) and phospho‐tau (PHF1): r = 0.9603 and 0.9459, p < 0.0001) tau protein within the brain. Furthermore, postmortem analysis revealed extensive co‐localization of the sdAb imaging probe with tau aggregates within neurons in the endosomal‐lysosomal system, indicating their interaction in these degradation pathways.ConclusionOverall, this specific sdAb imaging ligand has great potential as an in vivo diagnostic marker for Alzheimer's disease and related tauopathies, and sdAb‐based imaging may be applicable to a variety of protein conformational disorders.

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