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Differential regional distribution of phosphorylated tau and synapse loss in the nucleus accumbens in tauopathy model mice

Authors :
Yoshikuni Mizuno
Ran Inoue
Shunji Yamashita
Hiroshi Mizuma
Nobuhiko Kojima
Taiki Kambe
Naruhiko Sahara
Kohei Shimada
Nobutaka Hattori
Tatsuya Mizoroki
Norihiro Tada
Hirotaka Onoe
Akihiko Takashima
Yumiko Motoi
Koichi Ishiguro
Tetsuya Kimura
Source :
Neurobiology of Disease, Vol 42, Iss 3, Pp 404-414 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Tauopathies differ in terms of the brain regions that are affected. In Alzheimer's disease, basal forebrain and hippocampus are mainly involved, while frontotemporal lobar degeneration affects the frontal and temporal lobes and subcortical nuclei including striatum. Over 90% of human cases of tauopathies are sporadic, although the majority of established tau-transgenic mice have had mutations. This prompted us to establish transgenic mice expressing wild-type human tau (Tg601). Old (>14 months old) Tg601 mice displayed decreased anxiety in the elevated plus maze test and impaired place learning in the Morris water maze test. Immunoblotting of brain tissue identified that soluble tau multimer was increased with aging even though insoluble tau was not observed. In the striatum of old Tg601, the level of AT8- or AT180-positive tau was decreased compared with that of other regions, while PHF-1-positive tau levels remained equal. Phosphorylated tau-positive axonal dilations were present mainly in layers V and VI of the prefrontal cortex. Loss of synaptic dendritic spine and decreased immunohistochemical level of synaptic markers were observed in the nucleus accumbens. In vivo 2-[(18)F]fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose positron emission tomography analysis also showed decreased activity exclusively in the nucleus accumbens of living Tg601 mice. In Tg601 mice, the axonal transport defect in the prefrontal cortex-nucleus accumbens pathway may lead to decreased anxiety behavior. Differential distribution of hyperphosphorylated tau may cause region-specific neurodegeneration.

Details

ISSN :
09699961
Volume :
42
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....791fa496ce825eddc1ede8688a8f61c0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nbd.2011.02.002