4.6 Article

Cortical neuronal and glial pathology in TgTauP301L transgenic mice -: Neuronal degeneration, memory disturbance, and phenotypic variation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 169, Issue 4, Pages 1365-1375

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2006.051250

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Recapitulation of tau pathologies in an animal model has been a long-standing goal in neurodegenerative disease research. We generated transgenic (TgTau(P301L)) mice expressing a frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTPD-17) mutation within the longest form of tau (2N, 4R). TgTau(P301L) mice developed florid pathology including neuronal pretangles, numerous Grallyas-Braak-positive neurofibrillary tangles, and glial fibrillary tangles in the frontotemporal areas of the cerebrum, in the brainstem, and to a lesser extent in the spinal cord. These features were accompanied by gliosis, neuronal loss, and cerebral atrophy. Accumulated tau was hyperphosphorylated, conformationally changed, ubiquitinated, and sarkosyl-insoluble, with electron microscopy demonstrating wavy filaments. Aged TgTau(P301L) mice exhibited impairment in hippocampally dependent and independent behavioral paradigms, with impairments closely related to the presence of tau pathologies and levels of insoluble tau protein. We conclude that TgTau(P301L) mice recreate the substantial phenotypic variation and spectrum of pathologies seen in FI'DP-17 patients. Identification of genetic and/or environmental factors modifying the tau phenotype in these mice may shed light on factors modulating human tauopathies. These transgenic mice may aid therapeutic development for FTDP-17 and other diseases featuring accumulations of four-repeat tau, such as Alzheimer's disease, corticobasal degeneration, and progressive supranuclear palsy.

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