Sarah Buchholz, Hans Zempel*,
Introduction:TAU isoforms as disease mediators:The microtubule-associated protein TAU is predominantly present in the axons of neurons under physiological conditions.In Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and related tauopathies, TAU also mislocalizes (“TAU missorting”) to the soma and the dendrites, where it eventually forms aggregates, the so-called neurofibrillary tangles(for review see Zimmer-Bensch and Zempel,2021; Zempel, 2023).Alternative splicing of the TAU encodingMAPTgene results in eight major TAU isoforms, six of which are expressed in the human brain, while only three are present in the adult rodent brain (Goedert et al., 1989; Bullmann et al., 2009).The axodendritic distribution of the different TAU isoforms is strikingly different in neurons.The longest and least expressed (<10% of the whole TAUom in the human central nervous system (CNS)) isoform of TAU, 2N4R-TAU,e.g., is partially retained in the somatodendritic compartment, where it induces enhanced dendritic outgrowth and spine maturation (Zempel et al., 2017; Bachmann et al., 2021).Amyloidbeta oligomers (AβO) induce pathological TAU missorting and the loss of dendritic spines, a sensitive measure of synaptic health and function.Interestingly, TAU depletion in mice, primary rodent neurons, and induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived human neurons protects them from AβO toxicity, spine loss, and consequential neuronal dysfunction (Roberson et al., 2007;Zempel et al., 2013; Buchholz et al., 2022).
Here, we present preliminary data of a study investigating AβO-mediated spine loss in primary rodent neurons, depending on the presence of different TAU isoforms.We show that reintroducing human 2N4R-TAU, but not the other rodentspecific CNS-isoforms of TAU (0N3R, 0N4R, and 1N4R), intoMaptknockout (= TAU KO) neurons resensitizes these neurons to AβO-induced spine loss.Further, we show that endogenous 2N4R-TAU is expressed only after 20–30 daysin vitro(DIV) in primary rodent neurons and, in line with previous results, that 2N4R-TAU does not efficiently sort into the axon and is even mainly restricted to the somatodendritic compartment.Our results indicate that suppression of mature TAU isoforms,such as here 2N4R-TAU, in aged primary neurons via shRNA or a 2N-TAU specific antibody prevents AβO-induced spine loss.While preliminary and restricted to rodent cell culture experiments,this data adds to the observed differences in the axodendritic distribution of the different isoforms of TAU and hints towards a difference in their mediation of cellular stress in the context of AD.Here, we propose to differentially consider the individual TAU isoforms for future TAU-based therapeutic approaches for AD and related tauopathies.
Preliminary results:2N4R-TAU resensitizes TAU KO neurons to AβO-induced spine loss:TAU is essential for Aβ-induced neurotoxicity: Previous reports have already shown that TAU KO rodent neurons are resistant to Aβ-mediated toxicity(Roberson et al., 2007; Zempel et al., 2013).However, little is known about the contribution of the different TAU isoforms to synapse loss after Aβ insult.To study the influence of the different TAU isoforms on Aβ-mediated spine loss, human Dendra2c (D2)-tagged TAU isoforms were reexpressed in mature primary neuronal cultures(DIV16, prepared E16.5) fromMaptknockout mice, as described previously (Zempel et al.,2017).To assess spine density, tdTomato was co-expressed as a volume marker.Afterwards,neurons were exposed to 1 μM Aβ7:3 oligomers(as prepared before (Zempel et al., 2013, 2017))for 3 hours.Interestingly, significant (~50%)AβO-mediated spine loss was only observed in neurons expressing human 2N4R-TAU, but not the other three TAU isoforms typically present in rodent neurons, namely 1N4R, 0N4R and 0N3R(Figure 1A).
Since TAU isoform expression in rodents differs strongly from human TAU expression (Goedert et al., 1989; Bullmann et al., 2009), we next monitored TAU isoform expression in primary neurons from wild type rats by western blot analysis of neuronal cell lysates for 49 days (Figure 1B).In line with previous reports from mice(Bullmann et al., 2009), only 0N isoforms were detectable in young neurons (DIV2), with 0N3R as the major isoform expressed (> 90%; Figure 1B).Upon neuronal maturation, 0N3R expression decreased at a constant rate until it reached a proportion of ~20% of all isoforms in old neurons(DIV49).In contrast, 0N4R expression constantly increased until it reached an expression level of~50% at DIV49.In addition, expression of both 2N4R and 1N4R isoforms increased from DIV7,finally reaching 15% and 20% of all isoforms at DIV49, respectively.Especially the expression levels of 2N4R, 1N4R, and 0N3R, ranging between 15–20%, resemble the isoform expression reported by Trabzuni et al.(2012) for the human brain.All in all, these results suggest that rat primary neurons are rather suitable for the analysis of TAU isoforms if to be compared to the human brain, and considering that in the murine brain – in contrast to humans – up to 45% of 2N4R-TAU is expressed(Bullmann et al., 2009).
Recent studies suggest a sub-cellular difference in the human TAU isoform localization, and especially human 2N-TAU isoforms are retained in the somatodendritic compartment of wild type primary neurons (Zempel et al., 2017;Bachmann et al., 2021).Endogenous 2N-TAU localization was assessed in rat primary neurons by immunofluorescence staining with a 2N-TAU specific antibody (71C11; Figure 1C).Note that, as 2N3R-TAU is not expressed in our primary neurons(Figure 1B) and other rodents (Bullmann et al.,2009), this antibody here exclusively marks 2N4RTAU.Total TAU was stained by a polyclonal TAU antibody (K9JA), recognizing all isoforms of TAU,while MAP2 was used as a dendritic marker as described before (Zempel et al., 2017).We found that primary rat neurons showed solid staining for 2N-TAU only present in the soma and dendrites of the cells, in line with our previous findings(Zempel et al., 2017; Bachmann et al., 2021).All in all, 2N4R-TAU is retained from axonal sorting,and as dendritic TAU has been shown to drive spine loss and neuronal dysfunction (Zempel and Mandelkow, 2014), 2N4R-TAU could be a driver of Aβ-induced spine loss observed in rodent neurons.
Downregulation of endogenous 2N4R-TAU prevents AβO-induced spine loss:Next, we aimed to suppress endogenous TAU in our primary neuron cultures.In a first attempt, primary rat neurons were incubated with a 2N-TAU specific antibody (71C11) for 4–5 days.TAU isoform levels were assessed by western blot assay under dephosphorylating conditions.2N4R-TAU levels,but none of the other isoforms of TAU, were suppressed after incubation with 71C11 antibody compared to untreated controls (Figure 1D) in all three cultures.This hints towards antibodymediated suppression of TAU isoforms (here,due to the absence of 2N3R TAU, specifically 2N4R TAU) in neurons being possible.In the next step, to test whether 2N4R suppression may be beneficial in a disease context, the spine density of neurons after treatment with AβOs was analyzed in dependence on antibody-mediated 2N-TAU suppression.2N4R-TAU was suppressed by two different concentrations of 71C11 (hereafter referred to as 71C11-low (1:600) and 71C11-high (1:300)), resulting in lower or stronger 2N4R repression, respectively (Figure 1E).In line with previous reports (Zempel et al., 2013) and with our results above, AβO-treatment resulted in dendritic spine loss that was prevented by the suppression of 2N4R-TAU in a dose-dependent manner (Figure 1E).To further validate a potential beneficial effect of 2N4R-TAU, we next downregulated 2N4R-TAU by RNAi.For this, an adenovirus (AdV)-delivered shRNA construct was generated that specifically targets rat 2N-TAU isoforms (Figure 1F and G).AdV-mediated delivery resulted in significant knockdown of 2N4R-TAU (but not the other three detectable TAU isoforms) in our rat primary neurons, as analyzed by western blot assay (Figure 1F).These results indicate that RNAi-based knockdown of 2N-TAU isoforms is suitable to suppress 2N4R-TAU in rat primary neurons selectively, due to the absence of 2N3RTAU.Analysis of spine density after knockdown of endogenous rat 2N4R-TAU and subsequent AβO treatment again showed a noticeably increased spine density compared to AβO treated and mocktransduced neurons (Figure 1G), which confirmed that, indeed, 2N4R-TAU may mediate AβO-induced spine loss.Our results indicate that the 2N4RTAU isoform may specifically mediate acute AβOinduced spine loss.
Discussion and perspective: While preliminary and restricted to rodent primary neurons, we show here that the 2N4R-TAU isoform may specifically mediate Aβ-induced neurotoxicity.First, we investigated the effect of human TAU isoforms on TAU KO neurons in an AD paradigm.TAU KO mice and derived neurons are resistant to Aβ-mediated cognitive impairment and spine loss (Roberson 2007; Zempel et al., 2013).Here, re-expression of the human 2N4R isoform exclusively resensitized the neurons to Aβ-induced synaptotoxicity, indicating that 2N4R-TAU may significantly contribute to AD-like or Aβ-mediated TAU-based synaptotoxicity.
While rodents express only four TAU isoforms,namely 2N4R, 1N4R, 0N4R, and 0N3R, humans express two additional isoforms, 2N3R and 1N3R(Trabzuni et al., 2012) in the CNS.Compared to human neurons, which only express ~10% 2N4RTAU, mice express up to ~45% (Bullmann et al.,2009; Trabzuni et al., 2012).Here, we identified that late maturation stages of rat primary forebrain neurons show a human-like ratio of 2N4R-TAUvs.total TAU.Also, 1N4R- and 0N3RTAU expression levels were comparable to the human brain.Hence, we reason that rat primary forebrain neurons are an acceptable model system to study the 2N4R-TAU isoform, particularly the effect of its suppression.Of note, an antibody specific to 2N-TAU is suitable for studying 2N4RTAU specifically since rat primary neurons do not express 2N3R-TAU.While this is a technical advantage, as otherwise specifically targeting 2N4R-TAU protein/mRNA (without affecting 2N3R-TAU would be challenging), it is naturally a clear limitation of this study, as one cannot exclude significant effects of the isoforms simply not expressed in rodents.Nonetheless, using a 2N-TAU specific antibody for immunofluorescence microscopy, we observed that already in physiological conditions, 2N4R-TAU was retained in the soma and dendrites of rat neurons, underlining the differential intracellular sorting of TAU isoforms reported earlier (Zempel et al., 2017; Bachmann et al., 2021).As reported previously, treatment with AβOs resulted in missorting of total TAU (Zempel et al., 2013; Buchholz et al., 2022) but not in a reduction of 2N4R-TAU in the somatodendritic compartment and invasion of 2N4R-TAU into the axon hillock.Due to its dendritic presence both in our AD-like model and already under physiological conditions, these results hint towards 2N4R-TAU to be of critical importance for (post-)synaptic TAU toxicity.
Figure 1 |2N4R-TAU is necessary and sufficient for AβO-induced spine loss in primary neurons.
Next, we used antibody-mediated and AdVbased shRNA delivery to suppress 2N4R in mature neurons and investigate its role in AD-like Aβmediated neurotoxicity.While there was no effect on total TAU or neuronal health observable in physiological conditions, in AD-like conditions(after exposure to AβOs), suppression of 2N4RTAU resulted in noticeable prevention of AβOinduced spine loss, a sensitive measure of synaptic dysfunction.While in adult rodent neurons, only 4R-TAU isoforms are expressed, we cannot exclude that due to the additional expression of 3R-TAU in mature human neurons of the CNS, additional isoforms may be involved in the pathological cascade observed in AD patients.Nevertheless,as previously demonstrated in rodent tauopathy models and derived primary neurons, the presence and amount of 4R-TAU isoforms in these models are sufficient to drive neuronal dysfunction and neurodegeneration in disease paradigms.Recent results obtained from human iPSC-derived neurons re-expressing individual human TAU isoforms identified the human 1N4R isoform as a mediator of TAU toxicity induced by AβOs(Buchholz et al., 2022).However, it is difficult to compare these results with the results obtained here, due to the differences in experimental design (endogenousvs.overexpressed and tagged exogenous TAU, isolated isoform approachvs.all rodent-specific TAU isoforms present, hiPSCderived neuronsvs.primary rodent neurons).Of note, a comprehensive study recently compared the interactome of murine and human TAU and found remarkable differences between the two species even though theMAPTsequence is highly conserved.
Both, 2N4R and 1N4R TAU, are mature TAU isoforms present in rodents and previous interactome studies of murine TAU isoforms found already differences in the interactions of the individual isoforms and especially correlated 2N4R-TAU with neurodegenerative processes (Liu et al., 2016, for review see Stancu et al., 2019).In addition, is it likely, that due to differences in the N-terminal domains, the interactome of the 2N4R and 1N4R isoforms differs within a species and between species, leading to a different response to AβO-induced neuronal toxicity.Therefore, we should consider individual TAU isoforms when studying neurodegenerative diseases characterized by TAU pathology.
Identifying the toxic isoform of TAU in disease conditions may be of major importance, as complete knockout of TAU was shown to have some adverse effects, e.g., aged TAU KO mice having small nonpathological deficits in muscle function, changes in sleep/awake behavior and fear conditioning, and reduced long-term potentiation (Lopes et al., 2016).In humans,MAPT/TAU haploinsufficiency is associated with severe neurodevelopmental delay (as part of a microdeletion syndrome usually not restricted toMAPT-deletion).Nevertheless, several TAUreducing drugs are currently in different stages of clinical investigation.Our results, however, indicate that it might be sufficient and beneficial to target one (mature) isoform specifically to reduce or even prevent the synaptotoxicity mediated by TAU and to ameliorate potential side effects of total TAU reduction.While we did not observe any negative effects of the 2N4R-TAU based suppression, this still needs careful investigation.In particular 2N4RTAU expression resulted in dendrite extension and development of mature spine morphology (see e.g.Zempel, 2017).While TAU-KO mice, derived neurons and also our human iPSC-derived TAUKO neurons may be able to compensate for the absence of TAU e.g.by increasing the expression of other MAPs or changing their splicing, this cannot be taken for granted in settings of acute suppression in a mature organism.As such, future studies aiming at single isoform suppression of TAU should now take into consideration that synapse function may be affected in a subtle fashion, in particular when mature isoforms of TAU are suppressed for therapeutic purposes.We also note that so far 2N4R-TAU suppression did not change the overall behavior of total TAU,when investigated using a pan-TAU antibody.This is logical, as the majority of TAU in our system here is made up of other isoforms, which may still be mislocalized in pathological settings,e.g.as done here by exposure to AD-like AβOs.However, due to our experience with pulse-chase and immunofluorescence-based analysis of the different TAU isoforms, we can certainly postulate that the different isoforms of TAU may also show differential susceptibility to cellular or AD-like stress.
In summary, we show here and have shown earlier (Zempel et al., 2013) that the TAU isoform 2N4R alone is likely sufficient to mediate AD-like neurotoxicity in rodent primary neurons and that in subtle stress conditions, 2N4R-TAU may even be necessary for AD-like neurotoxicity.Therefore,we propose considering the TAU isoforms when developing future TAU-based therapies for AD and related dementia syndromes.
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaftand the Else-Kr?ner-Fresenius-Stiftung(to HZ).
Sarah Buchholz#, Hans Zempel*,#
Institute of Human Genetics, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany (Buchholz S,Zempel H)
Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne (CMMC),Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany(Buchholz S, Zempel H)
#Both authors contributed equally to this work.
*Correspondence to:Hans Zempel, PhD, MD,hans.zempel@uk-koeln.de.
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7510-3077(Hans Zempel)
Date of submission:August 25, 2023
Date of decision:October 8, 2023
Date of acceptance:October 25, 2023
Date of web publication:December 11, 2023
https://doi.org/10.4103/1673-5374.389644
How to cite this article:Buchholz S,Zempel H(2024)Suppression of mature TAU isoforms prevents Alzheimer’s disease-like amyloid-beta oligomer-induced spine loss in rodent neurons.Neural Regen Res 19(8):1655-1657.
Open access statement:This is an open access journal,and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License,which allows others to remix,tweak,and build upon the work non-commercially,as long asappropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
Open peer reviewer:Maxwell Eisenbaum,Roskamp Institute,USA.
Additional file:Open peer review report 1.
中國(guó)神經(jīng)再生研究(英文版)2024年8期