Literature DB >> 31822997

Human subiculo-fornico-mamillary system in Alzheimer's disease: Tau seeding by the pillar of the fornix.

Manon Thierry1,2, Susana Boluda1,2, Benoît Delatour1, Serge Marty1, Danielle Seilhean2, Marie-Claude Potier1, Charles Duyckaerts3,4.   

Abstract

In Alzheimer's disease (AD), Tau and Aβ aggregates involve sequentially connected regions, sometimes distantly separated. These alterations were studied in the pillar of the fornix (PoF), an axonal tract, to analyse the role of axons in their propagation. The PoF axons mainly originate from the subicular neurons and project to the mamillary body. Forty-seven post-mortem cases at various Braak stages (Tau) and Thal phases (Aβ) were analysed by immunohistochemistry. The distribution of the lesions showed that the subiculum was affected before the mamillary body, but neither Tau aggregation nor Aβ deposition was consistently first. The subiculum and the mamillary body contained Gallyas positive neurofibrillary tangles, immunolabelled by AT8, TG3, PHF1, Alz50 and C3 Tau antibodies. In the PoF, only thin and fragmented threads were observed, exclusively in the cases with neurofibrillary tangles in the subiculum. The threads were made of Gallyas negative, AT8 and TG3 positive Tau. They were intra-axonal and devoid of paired helical filaments at electron microscopy. We tested PoF homogenates containing Tau AT8 positive axons in a Tau P301S biosensor HEK cell line and found a seeding activity. There was no Aβ immunoreactivity detected in the PoF. We could follow microcryodissected AT8 positive axons entering the mamillary body; contacts between Tau positive endings and Aβ positive diffuse or focal deposits were observed in CLARITY-cleared mamillary body. In conclusion, we show that non-fibrillary, hyperphosphorylated Tau is transported by the axons of the PoF from the subiculum to the mamillary body and has a seeding activity. Either Tau aggregation or Aβ accumulation may occur first in this system: this inconstant order is incompatible with a cause-and-effects relationship. However, both pathologies were correlated and intimately associated, indicating an interaction of the two processes, once initiated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abeta; Alzheimer’s disease; Axon propagation; Biosensor; CLARITY; Electron microscopy; Microcryodissection; Propagation; Seeding; Subiculo-fornico-mamillary system; Tau

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31822997     DOI: 10.1007/s00401-019-02108-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Neuropathol        ISSN: 0001-6322            Impact factor:   17.088


  3 in total

1.  Professor Charles Duyckaerts (1951-2022).

Authors:  Danielle D Seilhean
Journal:  Acta Neuropathol       Date:  2022-10-19       Impact factor: 15.887

2.  Pyk2 overexpression in postsynaptic neurons blocks amyloid β1-42-induced synaptotoxicity in microfluidic co-cultures.

Authors:  Devrim Kilinc; Anaïs-Camille Vreulx; Tiago Mendes; Amandine Flaig; Diego Marques-Coelho; Maxime Verschoore; Florie Demiautte; Philippe Amouyel; Fanny Eysert; Pierre Dourlen; Julien Chapuis; Marcos R Costa; Nicolas Malmanche; Frédéric Checler; Jean-Charles Lambert
Journal:  Brain Commun       Date:  2020-08-28

3.  Does proteopathic tau propagate trans-synaptically in the brain?

Authors:  Wen Hu; Fei Liu; Cheng-Xin Gong; Khalid Iqbal
Journal:  Mol Neurodegener       Date:  2022-03-16       Impact factor: 14.195

  3 in total

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