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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Clavaguera F, Bolmont T, Crowther RA, Abramowski D, Frank S, Probst A, Fraser G, Stalder AK, Beibel M, Staufenbiel M, Jucker M, Goedert M, Tolnay M. Transmission and spreading of tauopathy in transgenic mouse brain. Nat Cell Biol. 2009 Jul;11(7):909-13. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Jurgen Goetz, ARF Advisor
Submitted 16 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2009

The title of this remarkable paper in Nature Cell Biology highlights two key findings: that a tau pathology can be transmitted in vivo, and that it spreads through the brain. The former is a feature of transmissible prions (a characteristic as enigmatic as to elude comprehension), while the latter addresses a key feature of the human Alzheimer pathology, one that despite major recent achievements has not been fully modeled in transgenic mice.

The study uses two mouse strains: ALZ17 mice express high levels of wild-type human tau but reveal only a modest pathology: amyotrophy in the absence of obvious neuronal cell loss and, despite massive hyperphosphorylation of tau, no formation of tau-containing neurofibrillary lesions. In contrast, P301S mice express, at levels comparable to the ALZ17 mice, a mutant form of tau found in familial cases of frontotemporal dementia. Although rarer than the P301L mutation, this mutation causes an earlier onset of pathology in humans. This may explain why the P301S mice present with a particularly robust phenotype, characterized by...  Read more


  Comment by:  Einar Sigurdsson (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 16 June 2009

Clavaguera and colleagues demonstrate in this elegant study that an injection of a brain extract from P301S tau mice induces aggregation of wild-type tau in mice expressing human or mouse tau. The pathology spreads to anatomically connected brain regions in mice transgenic for human tau but not in wild-type mice expressing only mouse tau. As discussed, tau expression levels may influence the spread, and human tau may also be more prone to aggregate than mouse tau.

These interesting and important in vivo findings tie nicely in with recent cell culture data (1), and support the view that clearance of extracellular tau may have a therapeutic utility, ideally in concert with removal of pathological intracellular tau (2,3). As previously reported, extracellular tau may not only be derived from dead cells but may be secreted and have an extracellular function (4). As discussed in more detail elsewhere (3), it is then conceivable that clearance of extracellular tau can enhance secretion of intracellular tau through a shift in equilibrium, and indirectly reduce pathological tau...  Read more


  Primary News: Traveling Tau—A New Paradigm for Tau- and Other Proteinopathies?

Comment by:  Makoto Higuchi
Submitted 17 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 17 June 2009

The work on murine models of tauopathies conducted by Clavaguera et al. has brought an intriguing view that fibrillar tau pathologies are intracranially transmittable from a single site affected by injected and possibly endogenous tau aggregates. The spreading of Gallyas-positive tau depositions was seemingly consequent to a chain reaction of fibrillogenesis consisting of either transgenically overproduced or endogenously expressed wild-type tau proteins, while the injected brain extracts from transgenic mice expressing the FTDP-17 P301S mutant tau only gave the initial seed for this surge of tangles. Since a PBS-soluble fraction of the extract did not induce overt changes in tau pathology, it is unlikely that monomeric foreign tau proteins convert the conformation of resident tau molecules from a flexible mode to a rigid, more amyloidogenic type, but insoluble tau assemblies preformed in the donor mice acted as seeds of massive inclusions. Pieces of these protein chunks might be axonally transported, and could be the secondary seeds at remote regions. Mechanisms by which alien...  Read more

  Primary News: Traveling Tau—A New Paradigm for Tau- and Other Proteinopathies?

Comment by:  Lary Walker, ARF Advisor
Submitted 17 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 17 June 2009

Clavaguera, Tolnay, Goedert, and colleagues present a compelling argument for the exogenous induction and endogenous spread of tauopathy in rodent models. In these experiments, tauopathy was seeded de novo both in a transgenic mouse strain that normally does not generate filamentous tau, and even (to a lesser degree) in non-transgenic mice. Insoluble tau was the most potent seed, and in both murine host strains the tau filaments that developed consisted of host tau protein. Three key findings are that 1) tauopathy can be seeded within neurons in the living brain by an exogenous seed; 2) once initiated, tauopathy spreads from one brain region to another, possibly via a chain reaction of molecular corruption along with intracellular and intercellular trafficking; and 3) aggregated tau (like prions, Aβ, and probably other pathogenic proteins) may exist as polymorphic and polyfunctional strains, the pathogenicity of which is governed by the characteristics of the corruptive seed and of the host. The findings add to the evidence that disorders of protein...  Read more

  Primary News: Traveling Tau—A New Paradigm for Tau- and Other Proteinopathies?

Comment by:  Seung-Jae Lee, Eliezer Masliah
Submitted 18 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 18 June 2009

Propagation and Prion-like Spreading of Proteins in Common Neurodegenerative Disorders; New Perspectives Emerging From Tau and Synuclein
Many major neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by protein aggregation and deposition in specific regions of brain. This protein pathology generally occurs in discrete regions of brain but eventually spreads into much larger areas (1,2). Several recent studies propose a prion-like, templated aggregation hypothesis regarding the mechanism underlying this propagation of disease-specific protein aggregation (3-5). The most recent report supporting this hypothesis has come from the work by Goedert, Tolnay, and their colleagues, who studied the propagation of tauopathy in transgenic mouse brain (6). In this study, they injected the brain extract of P301S tau transgenic mouse, which has filamentous tau aggregates, into the hippocampus and cerebral cortex of ALZ17, a transgenic line overexpressing wild type tau protein, and examined the spread of tau pathology over time. They found the spread of tauopathy not only within the...  Read more

  Comment by:  John Trojanowski, ARF Advisor
Submitted 23 June 2009  |  Permalink Posted 23 June 2009

This is a provocative and exceptionally well-done study that convincingly demonstrates the CNS spread of tau pathology induced by the injection of P301S transgenic (tg) mouse brain homogenates containing P301S pathological mutant tau into the brains of wild-type tau tg and non-tg mice. However, I do think the use of the term “transmission” in the paper is unfortunate because this conjures up the idea that tauopathies may be infectious diseases like transmissible spongiform encephalitises (TSEs), as exemplified by mad cow disease and Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (CJD). The concern comes from the fact that Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative tauopathy and this report could raise unwarranted worries on the part of the public or public health officials that AD is infectious and could be spread by contact with the millions of AD patients throughout the world. Although many studies by Carlton Gajdusek (e.g., see Godec et al., 1991) and others over the years failed to show reproducible evidence of transmission of AD by...  Read more
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:
Immunodepletion of tau: A mixture of anti-tau antibodies mouse monoclonal anti-tau (HT7) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT8) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), and mouse monoclonal anti-tau (TAU‑5) (Biosource Invitrogen) was used.
Western blotting: Brain extracts were run on 8% Tris-glycine SDS–PAGE, transferred onto a PVDF membrane (Immobilon P, Millipore) and probed with mouse monoclonal anti-tau (HT7) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT8) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), and mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT100) (Pierce Thermo Scientific).
Histology and immunohistochemistry: mouse monoclonal anti-tau (T14) (Zymed Invitrogen), mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT8) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT100) (Pierce Thermo Scientific), rabbit anti-tau BR189, rabbit anti-tau BR304 and rabbit anti-tau MT1 were used to stain tau; rabbit anti-Olig2 (Chemicon) was used to stain oligodendrocytes. Antibodies against NF200 (DakoCytomation) , Iba1 (Abcam), GFAP (Abcam) and MBP (Abcam) were used to visualize neurofilaments, astrocytes, microglia and myelin basic protein, respectively
Immunoelectron microscopy: rabbit anti-tau BR134, BR189, BR304 and mouse monoclonal anti-tau (AT100) (Pierce Thermo Scientific) were used to identify tau filaments.

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