| Literature DB >> 30584140 |
Rudy J Castellani1, George Perry2.
Abstract
There is considerable interest in the pathobiology ofEntities:
Keywords: Dementia pugilistica; phosphorylated tau; repetitive head trauma; tau; tauopathy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30584140 PMCID: PMC6398540 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-180721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Genetic heterogeneity of tau
| Differential regulation of exons 2, 3, and 10 in development and disease (6 isoforms) |
| Regulated 3R and 4R tau with different microtubule binding affinities |
| Two haplotypes (H1 and H2) that confer disease susceptibility |
| Pathogenic mutation causes frontotemporal dementia phenotype |
Some physiologic functions of tau
| Stabilization of microtubules |
| Actin binding and cytoskeletal integrity |
| Regulating neurite polarity |
| Axonal sprouting |
| Neuroplasticity |
| Axonal transport |
| Cell cycle regulation |
| Plasma membrane interaction |
| Synaptic transmission (“synaptic brake”) |
Some stimuli for tau phosphorylation
| Insulin dysfunction |
| Glucose deprivation |
| Starvation |
| Hibernation |
| Hypothermia |
| Anesthesia |
| Glucocorticoids |
| Opiates |
| Alcohol |
Diseases with tau neuropathology
| Frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17) |
| Alzheimer’s disease |
| Aging |
| Primary age-related tauopathy |
| Aging-related tau astrogliopathy |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy |
| Pick’s disease |
| Argyrophilic grain disease |
| Corticobasal degeneration |
| Progressive subcortical gliosis |
| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism-dementia complex |
| Diffuse neurofibrillary tangles with calcification |
| Dementia pugilistica |
| Tangle-only dementia |
| Down syndrome |
| Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease |
| Hallervorden-Spatz disease |
| Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease |
| Globular glial tauopathy |
| Niemann-Pick disease type C |
| Prion protein cerebral amyloid angiopathy |
| Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis |
| Myotonic dystrophy |
| Non-guanamian motor neuron disease with neurofibrillary tangles |
| Postencephalitic parkinsonism |
| Meningioangiomatosis |
| Tuberous Sclerosis |
Experimental and other limitations of the tau prion concept
| Inefficiency of templating in culture |
| Methods for generating neurotoxic species not standardized |
| Fibril characteristics necessary for seeding are poorly defined |
| No consensus standards for tau seeding in culture |
| Relevance of mutant tau |
| Selective isoform expression experimentally versus nonselective expression |
| Tau expression promiscuity in transgenic animals |
| Tau leakiness |
| Axonal (as opposed to perikaryal) expression of tau |
| No natural tauopathy in rodents |
| Phenotypic propagation of neurodegeneration as a function of strain is not demonstrated |
| Does not explain selective vulnerability |
| Contradicted by early appearance of tau in structures with diffuse projections |
Limitations of the TBI-progressive neurodegenerative tauopathy concept
| Neurological signs attributed to early 20th century boxing were not progressive in most cases |
| Index case of DP at autopsy was most likely familial AD in a former boxer |
| Index case of putative DP-like disease in a football player depicted age-related changes [ |
| Putative disease process is currently defined solely by immunohistochemistry (no clinical correlate required; no neurodegeneration (neuron or axon loss) required) |
| TBI in athletes is inferred from participation; otherwise undefined and impossible to quantitate |
| Athletes in modern case series were neurologically asymptomatic or had known neurodegenerative diseases in most cases |
| National Football League cohort has less cancer, fewer suicides, lower mortality, and better cardiovascular health compared to controls (no evidence of a pervasive, fatal disease related to occupational exposure) |
| Studies suggesting AD risk with mild TBI are inconsistent (no risk or modest risk) |
| AD is not confirmed pathologically in studies showing AD risk with moderate or severe TBI (dementia from structural brain injury in some cases not excluded) |
| No longitudinal data exists demonstrating TBI, latency, clinical neurodegeneration, and neurodegenerative pathology |
Challenges in addressing TBI-p-tau theory at autopsy
| Poor correlation of p-tau accumulations with clinical signs |
| Frequent lack of detailed TBI history |
| Evolving standards for sampling, immunohistochemistry, and diagnosis |
| Subjectivity in interpreting p-tau accumulations and tissue architecture |
| Broadening spectrum of benign, age-related p-tau patterns |
| Lack of guidelines for assessing vascular disease, metabolic derangements, polypharmacy |
| Unknown error rate between and within neuropathologists |
| Variable clinical characterization of individual cases during life |
| Absence of genetic data |
| Broad public misunderstanding of TBI consequences driven by scientifically naïve media |
| Absence of patient consequences for misdiagnosis at autopsy |
| Vulnerability to |
Some p-tau microscopic lesions
| Neurofibrillary tangle |
| Flame-shaped neurofibrillary tangle |
| Globus neurofibrillary tangle |
| Ghost tangle |
| Pre-tangle |
| Dystrophic neurite |
| Neuropil thread |
| Grain |
| Tufted astrocyte |
| Equivocal tufted astrocyte |
| Coiled body |
| Astrocytic plaque |
| Globular astroglial inclusion |
| Ramified astrocyte |
| Thorny astrocyte |
| Fuzzy astrocyte |