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- Title
Tau mis-splicing correlates with motor impairments and striatal dysfunction in a model of tauopathy.
- Authors
Damianich, Ana; Facal, Carolina Lucia; Muñiz, Javier Andrés; Mininni, Camilo; Soiza-Reilly, Mariano; León, Magdalena Ponce De; Urrutia, Leandro; Falasco, German; Ferrario, Juan Esteban; Avale, María Elena; Ponce De León, Magdalena
- Abstract
Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases caused by the abnormal metabolism of the microtubule associated protein tau (MAPT), which is highly expressed in neurons and critically involved in microtubule dynamics. In the adult human brain, the alternative splicing of exon 10 in MAPT pre-mRNA produces equal amounts of protein isoforms with either three (3R) or four (4R) microtubule binding domains. Imbalance in the 3R:4R tau ratio is associated with primary tauopathies that develop atypical parkinsonism, such as progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration. Yet, the development of effective therapies for those pathologies is an unmet goal. Here we report motor coordination impairments in the htau mouse model of tauopathy which harbour abnormal 3R:4R tau isoforms content, and in contrast to TauKO mice, are unresponsive to l-DOPA. Preclinical-PET imaging, array tomography and electrophysiological analyses indicated the dorsal striatum as the candidate structure mediating such phenotypes. Indeed, local modulation of tau isoforms by RNA trans-splicing in the striata of adult htau mice, prevented motor coordination deficits and restored basal neuronal firing. Together, these results suggest that abnormal striatal tau isoform content might lead to parkinsonian-like phenotypes and demonstrate a proof of concept that modulation of tau mis-splicing is a plausible disease-modifying therapy for some primary tauopathies.
- Subjects
TAU proteins; PROGRESSIVE supranuclear palsy; TUBULINS; LABORATORY mice; RNA splicing; PROTEIN metabolism; PROTEINS; BIOLOGICAL models; RESEARCH; NERVE tissue proteins; BASAL ganglia; ANIMAL experimentation; RESEARCH methodology; RNA; EVALUATION research; COMPARATIVE studies; RESEARCH funding; NEURODEGENERATION; MOTOR ability; MICE
- Publication
Brain: A Journal of Neurology, 2021, Vol 144, Issue 8, p2302
- ISSN
0006-8950
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1093/brain/awab130