4.7 Article

Immunotherapy with Cleavage-Specific 12A12mAb Reduces the Tau Cleavage in Visual Cortex and Improves Visuo-Spatial Recognition Memory in Tg2576 AD Mouse Model

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics15020509

Keywords

immunotherapy; Alzheimer's disease; tau protein; primary visual cortex; vision

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Tau-targeted immunotherapy is a promising approach for Alzheimer's disease (AD) treatment. This study shows that treatment with 12A12mAb significantly reduces the accumulation of tau and A beta pathology in the retina and visual centers of AD animal models, leading to improvement in visual cognitive abilities and synaptic plasticity. These findings have important implications for clinical interventions targeting visual impairments in AD.
Tau-targeted immunotherapy is a promising approach for treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Beyond cognitive decline, AD features visual deficits consistent with the manifestation of Amyloid beta-protein (A beta) plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) in the eyes and higher visual centers, both in animal models and affected subjects. We reported that 12A12-a monoclonal cleavage-specific antibody (mAb) which in vivo neutralizes the neurotoxic, N-terminal 20-22 kDa tau fragment(s)-significantly reduces the retinal accumulation in Tg(HuAPP695Swe)2576 mice of both tau and APP/A beta pathologies correlated with local inflammation and synaptic deterioration. Here, we report the occurrence of N-terminal tau cleavage in the primary visual cortex (V1 area) and the beneficial effect of 12A12mAb treatment on phenotype-associated visuo-spatial deficits in this AD animal model. We found out that non-invasive administration of 12 A12mAb markedly reduced the pathological accumulation of both truncated tau and A beta in the V1 area, correlated to significant improvement in visual recognition memory performance along with local increase in two direct readouts of cortical synaptic plasticity, including the dendritic spine density and the expression level of activity-regulated cytoskeleton protein Arc/Arg3.1. Translation of these findings to clinical therapeutic interventions could offer an innovative tau-directed opportunity to delay or halt the visual impairments occurring during AD progression

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