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A tau homeostasis signature is linked with the cellular and regional vulnerability of excitatory neurons to tau pathology.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Possenti, Andrea 
Freer, Rosie 
Nakano, Yoshikazu 
Hernandez Villegas, Nancy C 

Abstract

Excitatory neurons are preferentially impaired in early Alzheimer's disease but the pathways contributing to their relative vulnerability remain largely unknown. Here we report that pathological tau accumulation takes place predominantly in excitatory neurons compared to inhibitory neurons, not only in the entorhinal cortex, a brain region affected in early Alzheimer's disease, but also in areas affected later by the disease. By analyzing RNA transcripts from single-nucleus RNA datasets, we identified a specific tau homeostasis signature of genes differentially expressed in excitatory compared to inhibitory neurons. One of the genes, BCL2-associated athanogene 3 (BAG3), a facilitator of autophagy, was identified as a hub, or master regulator, gene. We verified that reducing BAG3 levels in primary neurons exacerbated pathological tau accumulation, whereas BAG3 overexpression attenuated it. These results define a tau homeostasis signature that underlies the cellular and regional vulnerability of excitatory neurons to tau pathology.

Description

Keywords

Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing, Alzheimer Disease, Animals, Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins, Brain, Homeostasis, Humans, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Neurons, tau Proteins

Journal Title

Nat Neurosci

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1097-6256
1546-1726

Volume Title

22

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Rights

All rights reserved