4.6 Article

Antibody Uptake into Neurons Occurs Primarily via Clathrin-dependent Fcγ Receptor Endocytosis and Is a Prerequisite for Acute Tau Protein Clearance

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 288, Issue 49, Pages 35452-35465

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.491001

Keywords

Alzheimer Disease; Antibodies; Endocytosis; Immunotherapy; Tau

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS077239, AG032611, AG020197]

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Background: How Tau immunotherapy clears Tau is not well known. Results: Tau antibody uptake correlates with Tau levels, is primarily via clathrin-dependent FcII/III endocytosis, and is required for acute Tau clearance. Conclusion: Following receptor-mediated uptake into neurons, antibodies co-localize with Tau aggregates and promote Tau clearance. Significance: Results support intracellular clearance as a viable route for immunotherapy and have major implications for future development. Tau immunotherapy is effective in transgenic mice, but the mechanisms of Tau clearance are not well known. To this end, Tau antibody uptake was analyzed in brain slice cultures and primary neurons. Internalization was rapid (<1 h), saturable, and substantial compared with control mouse IgG. Furthermore, temperature reduction to 4 degrees C, an excess of unlabeled mouse IgG, or an excess of Tau antibodies reduced uptake in slices by 63, 41, and 62%, respectively (p = 0.002, 0.04, and 0.005). Uptake strongly correlated with total and insoluble Tau levels (r(2) = 0.77 and 0.87 and p = 0.002 and 0.0002), suggesting that Tau aggregates influence antibody internalization and/or retention within neurons. Inhibiting phagocytosis did not reduce uptake in slices or neuronal cultures, indicating limited microglial involvement. In contrast, clathrin-specific inhibitors reduced uptake in neurons (78%, p < 0.0001) and slices (35%, p = 0.03), demonstrating receptor-mediated endocytosis as the primary uptake pathway. Fluid phase endocytosis accounted for the remainder of antibody uptake in primary neurons, based on co-staining with internalized dextran. The receptor-mediated uptake is to a large extent via low affinity FcII/III receptors and can be blocked in slices (43%, p = 0.04) and neurons (53%, p = 0.008) with an antibody against these receptors. Importantly, antibody internalization appears to be necessary for Tau reduction in primary neurons. Overall, these findings clarify that Tau antibody uptake is primarily receptor-mediated, that these antibodies are mainly found in neurons with Tau aggregates, and that their intracellular interaction leads to clearance of Tau pathology, all of which have major implications for therapeutic development of this approach.

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