| Literature DB >> 30450030 |
Petr Novak1,2, Eva Kontsekova1,3, Norbert Zilka1,3, Michal Novak1,4.
Abstract
Neurofibrillary pathology comprised of pathological tau protein is closely tied to a range of neurodegenerative disorders, the most common of which is Alzheimer's disease. While they are individually rarer, a range of other disorders, the tauopathies (including Pick's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration, primary progressive aphasia, and ∼50% of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia cases) display pronounced underlying tau pathology. In all cases, the distribution and amount of tau pathology closely correlates with the severity and phenotype of cognitive impairment, and with the pattern and degree of brain atrophy. Successfully counteracting tau pathology is likely to halt or slow the progression of these debilitating disorders. This makes tau a target of prime importance, yet an elusive one. The diversity of the tau proteome and post-translational modifications, as well as pathophysiology of tau are reviewed. Beginning 2013, a range of tau-targeted immunotherapies have entered clinical development; these therapies, and their common themes and differences are reviewed. The manuscript provides an extensive discussion on epitope selection for immunotherapies against tau pathology, on immunological mechanisms involved in their action, and challenges such as immune senescence, vaccine design, or evolution of epitopes. Furthermore, we provide methodological recommendations for the characterization of active vaccines and antibodies, animal models, and the target itself - the diseased tau proteome.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; clinical trials; immunotherapy; neurofibrillary degeneration; tau
Year: 2018 PMID: 30450030 PMCID: PMC6224648 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Overview of the most prevalent tauopathies.
| Disease | Tau lesion type | Lesion distribution | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease | Neurofibrillary tangles | Allocortex, limbic regions, most neocortical fields except motor cortex, brainstem (locus coeruleus, raphe nuclei) | Predominantly amnestic, w. disorientation in time and space. Language, dysexecutive, and visual variant exist. Multiple domains impaired in dementia. | Pathology: ( |
| Argyrophilic grain disease | Argyrophilic grains, pre-neurofibrillary tangles in neurons and coiled bodies in oligodendrocytes | Mainly entorhinal cortex and hippocampus, insula, amygdala, hypothalamus, cingulated gyrus, … | Amnestic and multi-domain cognitive impairment. Behavioral abnormalities and FTD-like symptoms possible. | Pathology: ( |
| Chronic traumatic encephalopathy | Neurofibrillary tangles and neurites, astrocytic tangles | Focal (perivascular) epicenters, amygdala, hippocampus, nucleus basalis of Meynert, substantia nigra, locus coeruleus | Mainly executive function, behavior, and short-term memory impaired | Pathology: ( |
| Corticobasal degeneration | Pre-tangles | Basal ganglia, thalamus, focal parietal, mostly asymmetric, and brainstem | Asymmetric levodopa-resistant parkinsonism, postural instability, dystonia, myoclonus. Behavioral changes, aphasia, cognitive impairment. Cortical sensory loss. Alien limb. | Pathology: ( |
| Dementia in Down syndrome | Similar to AD | Similar to AD | Similar to AD, complicated by existing cognitive disability | Pathology: ( |
| Frontotemporal lobar degeneration (w./w.o. Parkinsonism) | (extremely varied) | Frontal and temporal/temporoparietal neocortex, (substantia nigra) | Language (PPA), behavior, executive function (bvFTD), possibly parkinsonism (FTDP-17) | Pathology: ( |
| Pick’s disease | Pick bodies | Frontal and temporal neocortex, dentate gyrus, deep gray matter and brainstem (monoaminergic nuclei) | Language, behavior, executive function (as bvFTD or PPA) | Pathology: ( |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy | Globose NFTs | Predominantly in basal ganglia, subthalamic nucleus, and substantia nigra. Involvement of motor cortex and cerebellum (e.g., superior cerebellar peduncle). | Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy, postural | Pathology: ( |
| Tangle-only dementia | Neurofibrillary tangles | Allocortex and medial temporal lobe, limbic regions; subcortical: locus coeruleus, nucleus basalis of Meynert, amygdala | Mainly memory deficit; slower progression than AD | Pathology and Clinics: ( |
Proposed substrates for reactivity assessments of tau-targeted immunotherapies.
| Substrate | Description and details |
|---|---|
| The immunogen | Reference substrate |
| Healthy tau protein | Physiological tau, ideally both 3R and 4R (e.g., 2N3R, 2N4R) |
| Post-translationally modified tau | Truncated tau species, phospho-species |
| Sarcosyl-insoluble tau | Qualitative assessment in Western blot, quantitative assessment in ELISA, comparison to pan-tau antibody |
| Human brain tissue | Tissue immunohistochemistry on AD and non-AD tauopathies |
Proposed aspects of model characterization.
| Model attribute | Method | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biochemical aspects | Tau proteome | Western blot | |
| Filament morphology | Electron microscopy | ||
| Pathology distribution and morphology | Immunohistochemistry | ||
| Presence of β-sheets | Staining with Thioflavin-S, Congo-red, silver | ||
| Seeding capability | |||
| Transgene expression level | Quantitative real time PCR (mRNA), Western blot, ELISA (protein), both related to the expression of endogenous tau | ||
| Clinical aspects | Impairment phenotype | Cognitive and motor assays, EEG, electrophysiology | |
| Age of onset, survival | – | ||
| Other | Variability | Numerical variability in all of the above aspects must be quantified, with special attention to the effects of sex and genetic background. | – |
| Neuronal loss | Quantification of neuron specific markers | ||
| Synaptic loss | Quantification of synaptic markers | ||
| Neuroinflammation | Activation of astrocytes and microglia, cytokine profile | ||
Overview of tau-targeted immunotherapies in clinical development.
| Compound | Type and isotype | Epitope | Targeted tau species | Proposed mechanism | Disease models used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AADvac1 | Active, antibody response is mostly IgG1 | Primary: 294–305 Secondary: 268–283; 330-335; 362–367 | Conformationally altered extracellular tau (monomer, oligomer, fibril), focusing on seeding-capable extracellular tau | Anti-aggregation, opsonisation, inhibition of cell-to-cell spread of neurofibrillary pathology | SHR72 rats (tau 151-391/4R), SHR background R3/m4 mice (tau 151-391/34R), C57BL/6 background |
| ACI-35 | Active | pS396 (some sources additionally mention pS404) | Tau pS396 with a conformation that is typically present in the brain of tauopathy patients, preferentially multimeric conformers | Reduction of pS396-tau (soluble and insoluble) | P301L tau mice, FVB/Nbackground |
| ABBV-8E12 | Passive, IgG4 | 25–30 | Extracellular tau | Inhibition of cell-to-cell spread of neurofibrillary pathology | P301S tau mice, B6C3 background |
| BIIB076 | Passive, IgG1 | Undisclosed | Monomeric and fibrillary forms, as well as tau isolated from healthy human and Alzheimer’s disease brains. | (undisclosed) | (Undisclosed) |
| BIIB092 | Passive, IgG4 | Exact epitope undisclosed (N-terminal inserts?) | extracellular, N-terminal fragments of tau (eTau) | Secondary reduction of amyloid-β and of neuronal hyperactivity | JNPL3 P301L mice, C57BL/DBA2/SW background tau-4R/2N-P301L van Leuven mice, C57Bl/6 background |
| JNJ-63733657 | Passive, isotype undisclosed | Undisclosed, presumably mid-region | Seeding-capable tau | Neutralization of tau seeds and reduction of pathology | (Undisclosed) |
| LY3303560 | Passive, isotype undisclosed | 7–9; 313–322 | Soluble tau aggregates with intact N-terminus | Neutralization of tau seeds and reduction of pathology. | (Undisclosed) |
| RO 7105705 | Passive, IgG4 | N-terminus | N-terminus of all six isoforms, both monomeric and oligomeric, regardless of phosphorylation status | Inhibition of cell-to-cell spread of neurofibrillary pathology | (Undisclosed) |
| UCB0107 | Passive, isotype undisclosed | 235–246 | Seeding-capable extracellular tau | Inhibition of cell-to-cell spread of neurofibrillary pathology | (Undisclosed) |