Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by extracellular amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques and intracellular tau inclusions. However, the exact mechanistic link between these two AD lesions remains enigmatic. Through injection of human AD-brain-derived pathological tau (AD-tau) into Aβ plaque-bearing mouse models that do not overexpress tau, we recapitulated the formation of three major types of AD-relevant tau pathologies: tau aggregates in dystrophic neurites surrounding Aβ plaques (NP tau), AD-like neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and neuropil threads (NTs). These distinct tau pathologies have different temporal onsets and functional consequences on neural activity and behavior. Notably, we found that Aβ plaques created a unique environment that facilitated the rapid amplification of proteopathic AD-tau seeds into large tau aggregates, initially appearing as NP tau, which was followed by the formation and spread of NFTs and NTs, likely through secondary seeding events. Our study provides insights into a new multistep mechanism underlying Aβ plaque-associated tau pathogenesis.
The motor neuron (MN) degenerative disease, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by deficiency of SMN (survival motor neuron), a ubiquitous and indispensable protein essential for biogenesis of snRNPs, key components of pre-mRNA processing. However, SMA's hallmark MN pathology, including neuromuscular junction (NMJ) disruption and sensory-motor circuitry impairment, remains unexplained. Toward this end, we used deep RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to determine if there are any transcriptome changes in MNs and surrounding spinal cord glial cells (white matter, WM) microdissected from SMN-deficient SMA mouse model at presymptomatic postnatal day 1 (P1), before detectable MN pathology (P4-P5). The RNA-seq results, previously unavailable for SMA at any stage, revealed cell-specific selective mRNA dysregulations (∼300 of 11,000 expressed genes in each, MN and WM), many of which are known to impair neurons. Remarkably, these dysregulations include complete skipping of agrin's Z exons, critical for NMJ maintenance, strong upregulation of synapse pruning-promoting complement factor C1q, and down-regulation of Etv1/ER81, a transcription factor required for establishing sensory-motor circuitry. We propose that dysregulation of such specific MN synaptogenesis genes, compounded by many additional transcriptome abnormalities in MNs and WM, link SMN deficiency to SMA's signature pathology.transcriptome perturbations | Z+ (neuronal) agrin | C1q complex S pinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive motor neuron (MN) degenerative disease and a leading genetic cause of infant mortality (1, 2). SMA is caused by deletions or point mutations in the survival of motor neurons 1 gene (SMN1) (3), exposing a splicing defect in a duplicated gene (SMN2), which produces predominantly exon 7-skipped mRNA (SMNΔ7) (4). This in turn creates a degron that destabilizes the SMNΔ7 protein, resulting in reduced SMN levels (SMN deficiency) (5). SMA pathology has been extensively characterized in patients as well as a widely used SMA mouse model (6). Major morphological and biochemical deficits have been found at neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) and sensory-motor synapses. NMJ defects are first detectable at postnatal day 5 (P5), including presynaptic defects of terminal arborization and intermediate neurofilament aggregation in MNs, poor postsynaptic organization of AChRs in muscle, as well as reduced synaptic vesicle density and release at the NMJ (7-9). Importantly, similar NMJ defects have been reported in type I (the most severe type) SMA human fetuses (10). SMA MNs have also been shown to be hyperexcitable and loss of proprioceptive synapses on the somata, and proximal dendrites of SMA MNs (MN deafferentation) occurs no later than P4 (11-13). These findings indicate that both peripheral (NMJs) and central (sensory-motor) synapses are affected in SMA mice at early stage of disease. Although SMA is clinically manifested primarily in MNs, recent studies have shown that other cell types and nonneuronal tissues are also involved (13,14,15). SMN,...
The dentate gyrus plays critical roles both in cognitive processing, and in regulation of the induction and propagation of pathological activity. The cellular and circuit mechanisms underlying these diverse functions overlap extensively. At the cellular level, the intrinsic properties of dentate granule cells combine to endow these neurons with a fundamental reluctance to activate, one of their hallmark traits. At the circuit level, the dentate gyrus constitutes one of the more heavily inhibited regions of the brain, with strong, fast feedforward and feedback GABAergic inhibition dominating responses to afferent activation. In pathologic states such as epilepsy, a number of alterations within the dentate gyrus combine to compromise the regulatory properties of this circuit, culminating in a collapse of its normal function. This epilepsy-associated transformation in the fundamental properties of this critical regulatory hippocampal circuit may contribute both to seizure propensity, and cognitive and emotional comorbidities characteristic of this disease state.
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