4.7 Article

Astrocytic 4R tau expression drives astrocyte reactivity and dysfunction

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.152012

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Rainwater Charitable Foundation
  2. NIH [NS110890]
  3. NIH/National Institute on Aging [K01AG062796]
  4. Washington University School of Medicine, The Children's Discovery Institute of Washington University
  5. St. Louis Children's Hospital [CDI-CORE-2015-505, CDI-CORE-2019-813]
  6. Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital [3770, 4642]

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This study finds that abnormal expression of 4R tau in astrocytes is associated with the progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Increasing the expression of 4R tau in astrocytes leads to increased expression of neurotoxic genes and dysregulation of homeostatic function. In addition, co-culturing healthy neurons with astrocytes expressing 4R tau results in abnormal firing frequency and hypersynchrony of neurons.
The protein tau and its isoforms are associated with several neurodegenerative diseases, many of which are characterized by greater deposition of the 4-repeat (4R) tau isoform; however, the role of 4R tau in disease pathogenesis remains unclear. We created antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) that alter the ratio of 3R to 4R tau to investigate the role of specific tau isoforms in disease. Preferential expression of 4R tau in human tau-expressing (hTau-expressing) mice was previously shown to increase seizure severity and phosphorylated tau deposition without neuronal or synaptic loss. In this study, we observed strong colocalization of 4R tau within reactive astrocytes and increased expression of pan-reactive and neurotoxic genes following 3R to 4R tau splicing ASO treatment in hTau mice. Increasing 4R tau levels in primary astrocytes provoked a similar response, including a neurotoxic genetic profile and diminished homeostatic function, which was replicated in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (iPSC-derived) astrocytes harboring a mutation that exhibits greater 4R tau. Healthy neurons cultured with 4R tau-expressing human iPSC-derived astrocytes exhibited a higher firing frequency and hypersynchrony, which could be prevented by lowering tau expression. These findings support a potentially novel pathway by which astrocytic 4R tau mediates reactivity and dysfunction and suggest that astrocyte-targeted therapeutics against 4R tau may mitigate neurodegenerative disease progression.

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