Title Distinct Neurotoxic Effects of Extracellular Tau Species in Primary Neuronal-Glial Cultures /
Authors Pampuscenko, Katryna ; Morkūnienė, Ramunė ; Krasauskas, Lukas ; Smirnovas, Vytautas ; Tomita, Taisuke ; Borutaite, Vilmante
DOI 10.1007/s12035-020-02150-7
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Is Part of Molecular Neurobiology.. New York : Springer. 2021, vol. 58, no. 2, p. 658-667.. ISSN 0893-7648. eISSN 1559-1182
Keywords [eng] Alzheimer’s disease ; Cell death ; Microglia ; Neurons. ; Tau protein ; Tauopathy
Abstract [eng] Recent data from various experimental models support the link between extracellular tau and neurodegeneration; however, the exact mechanisms by which extracellular tau or its modified forms or aggregates cause neuronal death remain unclear. We have previously shown that exogenously applied monomers and oligomers of the longest tau isoform (2N4R) at micromolar concentrations induced microglial phagocytosis of stressed-but-viable neurons in vitro. In this study, we investigated whether extracellular phosphorylated tau2N4R (p-tau2N4R), isoform 1N4R (tau1N4R) and K18 peptide can induce neuronal death or loss in primary neuronal-glial cell cultures. We found that p-tau2N4R at 30 nM concentration induced loss of viable neurons; however, 700 nM p-tau2N4R caused necrosis of both neurons and microglia, and this neuronal death was partially glial cell-dependent. We also found that extracellular tau1N4R oligomers, but not monomers, at 3 μM concentration caused neuronal death in mixed cell cultures: self-assembly tau1N4R dimers-tetramers induced neuronal necrosis and apoptosis, whereas Aβ-promoted tau1N4R oligomers caused glial cell-dependent loss of neurons without signs of increased cell death. Monomeric and pre-aggregated tau peptide containing 4R repeats (K18) had no effect in mixed cultures, suggesting that tau neurotoxicity might be dependent on N-terminal part of the protein. Taken together, our results show that extracellular p-tau2N4R is the most toxic form among investigated tau species inducing loss of neurons at low nanomolar concentrations and that neurotoxicity of tau1N4R is dependent on its aggregation state.
Published New York : Springer
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2021