| Literature DB >> 34078745 |
Chenxi Qiu1,2,3,4, Onder Albayram1,2,3,5, Asami Kondo1,2,3, Bin Wang1,2,3,4, Nami Kim1,2,3, Ken Arai6, Cheng-Yu Tsai1,2,3, Mahmoud A Bassal2,3,7,8, Megan K Herbert1,2,3, Kazuo Washida6, Peter Angeli1,2,3, Shingo Kozono1,2,3, Joseph E Stucky1,2,3, Sean Baxley1,2,3, Yu-Min Lin1,2,3, Yan Sun9, Alexander Rotenberg9, Barbara J Caldarone10, Eileen H Bigio11, Xiaochun Chen12, Daniel G Tenen2,3,7,8, Mark Zeidel2, Eng H Lo6, Xiao Zhen Zhou13,2,3,4, Kun Ping Lu13,2,3,4,14.
Abstract
Compelling evidence supports vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) including Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the underlying pathogenic mechanisms and treatments are not fully understood. Cis P-tau is an early driver of neurodegeneration resulting from traumatic brain injury, but its role in VCID remains unclear. Here, we found robust cis P-tau despite no tau tangles in patients with VCID and in mice modeling key aspects of clinical VCID, likely because of the inhibition of its isomerase Pin1 by DAPK1. Elimination of cis P-tau in VCID mice using cis-targeted immunotherapy, brain-specific Pin1 overexpression, or DAPK1 knockout effectively rescues VCID-like neurodegeneration and cognitive impairment in executive function. Cis mAb also prevents and ameliorates progression of AD-like neurodegeneration and memory loss in mice. Furthermore, single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that young VCID mice display diverse cortical cell type-specific transcriptomic changes resembling old patients with AD, and the vast majority of these global changes were recovered by cis-targeted immunotherapy. Moreover, purified soluble cis P-tau was sufficient to induce progressive neurodegeneration and brain dysfunction by causing axonopathy and conserved transcriptomic signature found in VCID mice and patients with AD with early pathology. Thus, cis P-tau might play a major role in mediating VCID and AD, and antibody targeting it may be useful for early diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of cognitive impairment and dementia after neurovascular insults and in AD.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34078745 PMCID: PMC8272885 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaz7615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 19.319