4.7 Article

Accumulation of pathological tau species and memory loss in a conditional model of tauopathy

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 27, Issue 14, Pages 3650-3662

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0587-07.2007

Keywords

tau; transgenic; neurodegeneration; Alzheimer's disease; FTDP-17; toxicity

Categories

Funding

  1. NIA NIH HHS [P30 AG010161, P01-AG014449, P01 AG017216, P01 AG014449, P01-AG017216, P30 AG10161] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NINDS NIH HHS [R01-NS4635, P50 NS040256, P50-NS40256-06] Funding Source: Medline

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Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) are a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies, but recent studies in a conditional mouse model of tauopathy (rTg4510) have suggested that NFT formation can be dissociated from memory loss and neurodegeneration. This suggests that NFTs are not the major neurotoxic tau species, at least during the early stages of pathogenesis. To identify other neurotoxic tau protein species, we performed biochemical analyses on brain tissues from the rTg4510 mouse model and then correlated the levels of these tau proteins with memory loss. We describe the identification and characterization of two forms of tau multimers (140 and 170 kDa), whose molecular weight suggests an oligomeric aggregate, that accumulate early in the pathogenic cascade in this mouse model. Similar tau multimers were detected in a second mouse model of tauopathy (JNPL3) and in tissue from patients with Alzheimer's disease and FTDP-17 (frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17). Moreover, levels of the tau multimers correlated consistently with memory loss at various ages in the rTg4510 mouse model. Our findings suggest that accumulation of early-stage aggregated tau species, before the formation of NFT, is associated with the development of functional deficits during the pathogenic progression of tauopathy.

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