4.6 Article

Ultrasensitive tau biosensor cells detect no seeding in Alzheimer's disease CSF

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01185-8

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; Tau; Seeding; Cerebrospinal fluid; Biomarkers

Categories

Funding

  1. UT Southwestern Integrated Program for the Advancement of Neuroscience Research Careers (NIH) [5R25NS098987]
  2. Alzheimer's Association [2018-AACSF-591977]

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Tau protein forms self-replicating assemblies that may contribute to the progression of Alzheimer's disease and related conditions. Improved biosensor cell lines, such as the v2H cells, have been developed to detect tau seeding activity in cerebrospinal fluid with greater sensitivity. However, the findings of tau seeding in AD patients' CSF have not been widely replicated.
Tau protein forms self-replicating assemblies (seeds) that may underlie progression of pathology in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related tauopathies. Seeding in recombinant protein preparations and brain homogenates has been quantified with biosensor cell lines that express tau with a disease-associated mutation (P301S) fused to complementary fluorescent proteins. Quantification of induced aggregation in cells that score positive by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) is accomplished by cell imaging or flow cytometry. Several groups have reported seeding activity in antemortem cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) using various methods, but these findings are not yet widely replicated. To address this question, we created two improved FRET-based biosensor cell lines based on tau expression, termed version 2 low (v2L) and version 2 high (v2H). We determined that v2H cells are similar to 100-fold more sensitive to AD-derived tau seeds than our original lines, and coupled with immunoprecipitation reliably detect seeding from samples containing as little as 100 attomoles of recombinant tau fibrils or similar to 32 pg of total protein from AD brain homogenate. We tested antemortem CSF from 11 subjects with a clinical diagnosis of AD, 9 confirmed by validated CSF biomarkers. We used immunoprecipitation coupled with seed detection in v2H cells and detected no tau seeding in any sample. Thus we cannot confirm prior reports of tau seeding activity in the CSF of AD patients. This next generation of ultra-sensitive tau biosensors may nonetheless be useful to the research community to quantify tau pathology as sensitively and specifically as possible.

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