4.6 Article

Targeting TDP-43 Pathology Alleviates Cognitive and Motor Deficits Caused by Chronic Cerebral Hypoperfusion

Journal

NEUROTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 1095-1112

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13311-021-01015-8

Keywords

TDP-43; Chronic cerebral hypoperfusion; Autophagy; NF-κ b; Dementia

Funding

  1. Canadian Consortium for Neurodegenerative Diseases and Aging (CCNA)
  2. Hudson Translational Grant (ALS Canada/Brain Canada)
  3. Alzheimer Society of Canada
  4. Canada Research Chair in Neurodegeneration

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Vascular dementia is a common form of dementia in the aging population, with molecular mechanisms involving TDP-43 mislocalization and cognitive impairments. A new study found that a specific drug can mitigate TDP-43 pathology, enhance autophagy, and ameliorate cognitive and motor deficits in mice with chronic brain hypoperfusion.
Vascular dementia is one of the most common forms of dementia in aging population. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in development of disease and the link between the cerebrovascular pathology and the cognitive impairments remain elusive. Currently, one common and/or converging neuropathological pathway leading to dementia is the mislocalization and altered functionality of the TDP-43. We recently demonstrated that brain ischemia triggers an age-dependent deregulation of TDP-43 that was associated with exacerbated neurodegeneration. Here, we report that chronic cerebral hypoperfusion in mice (CCH) produced by unilateral common carotid artery occlusion induces cytoplasmic mislocalization of TDP-43 and formation of insoluble phosho-TDP-43 aggregates reminiscent of pathological changes detected in cortical neurons of human brain samples from patients suffering from vascular dementia. Moreover, the CCH in mice caused chronic activation of microglia and innate immune response, development of cognitive deficits, and motor impairments. Oral administration of a novel analog (IMS-088) of withaferin A, an antagonist of nuclear factor-kappa B essential modulator (NEMO), led to mitigation of TDP-43 pathology, enhancement of autophagy, and amelioration of cognitive/motor deficits in CCH mice. Taken together, our results suggest that targeting TDP-43 pathogenic inclusions may have a disease-modifying effect in dementia caused by chronic brain hypoperfusion.

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