Abstract

Neurofibrillary lesions are characteristic for a group of human diseases, named tauopathies, which are characterized by prominent intracellular accumulations of abnormal filaments formed by the microtubule-associated protein Tau. The tauopathies are accompanied by abnormal changes in Tau protein, including pathological conformation, somatodendritic mislocalization, hyperphosphorylation, and aggregation, whose interdependence is not well understood. To address these issues we have created transgenic mouse lines in which different variants of full-length Tau are expressed in a regulatable fashion, allowing one to switch the expression on and off at defined time points. The Tau variants differ by small mutations in the hexapeptide motifs that control the ability of Tau to adopt a beta-structure conformation and hence to aggregate. The "pro-aggregation" mutant DeltaK280, derived from one of the mutations observed in frontotemporal dementias, aggregates avidly in vitro, whereas the "anti-aggregation" mutant DeltaK280/PP cannot aggregate because of two beta-breaking prolines. In the transgenic mice, the pro-aggregation Tau induces a pathological conformation and pre-tangle aggregation, even at low expression levels, the anti-aggregation mutant does not. This illustrates that abnormal aggregation is primarily controlled by the molecular structure of Tau in vitro and in the organism. Both variants of Tau become mislocalized and hyperphosphorylated independently of aggregation, suggesting that localization and phosphorylation are mainly a consequence of increased concentration. These pathological changes are reversible when the expression of Tau is switched off. The pro-aggregation Tau causes a strong reduction in spine synapses.

Highlights

  • Whereas AD is characterized by the coexistence of two types of protein aggregates, there are several neurodegenerative disorders dominated by Tau aggregates and termed “Tauopathies” [10, 11]

  • Several transgenic mouse models have been developed in the past to unravel the underlying mechanisms of Tau pathology in AD and other tauopathies [12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]

  • The CaMKII␣ promoter enables us to achieve a preferential expression of the transgene in the entorhinal region and hippocampus so that the spatial distribution of the human Tau mutants in our model is similar to that in AD

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Summary

Introduction

The pro-aggregation Tau induces a pathological conformation and pre-tangle aggregation, even at low expression levels, the antiaggregation mutant does not. For the pro-aggregation mutant mice, an increase in Tau phosphorylation was initially observed at 3 months after induction of Tau expression with the antibody 12E8 (Fig. 5).

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