Inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3 by lithium correlates with reduced tauopathy and degeneration<i>in vivo</i>

Wendy Noble(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Emmanuel Planel(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Cindy Zehr(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Vicki Olm(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Jordana L. Meyerson(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Farhana E. Suleman(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Kate Gaynor(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Lili Wang(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), John J. LaFrancois(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Boris Feinstein(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Mark P. Burns(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Pavan Krishnamurthy(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Wen Yi(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Ratan V. Bhat(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Jada Lewis(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Dennis W. Dickson(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research), Karen Duff(Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 2, 2005
Cited by 694Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Neurofibrillary tangles composed of hyperphosphorylated, aggregated tau are a common pathological feature of tauopathies, including Alzheimer's disease. Abnormal phosphorylation of tau by kinases or phosphatases has been proposed as a pathogenic mechanism in tangle formation. To investigate whether kinase inhibition can reduce tauopathy and the degeneration associated with it in vivo, transgenic mice overexpressing mutant human tau were treated with the glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) inhibitor lithium chloride. Treatment resulted in significant inhibition of GSK-3 activity. Lithium administration also resulted in significantly lower levels of phosphorylation at several epitopes of tau known to be hyperphosphorylated in Alzheimer's disease and significantly reduced levels of aggregated, insoluble tau. Administration of a second GSK-3 inhibitor also correlated with reduced insoluble tau levels, supporting the idea that lithium exerts its effect through GSK-3 inhibition. Levels of aggregated tau correlated strongly with degree of axonal degeneration, and lithium-chloride-treated mice showed less degeneration if administration was started during early stages of tangle development. These results support the idea that kinases are involved in tauopathy progression and that kinase inhibitors may be effective therapeutically.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis