3D Visualization of the Temporal and Spatial Spread of Tau Pathology Reveals Extensive Sites of Tau Accumulation Associated with Neuronal Loss and Recognition Memory Deficit in Aged Tau Transgenic Mice

Hongjun Fu(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), S. Abid Hussaini(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Susanne Wegmann(Harvard University), Caterina P. Profaci(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jacob D. Daniels(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Mathieu Herman(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Sheina Emrani(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Helen Y. Figueroa(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Bradley T. Hyman(Harvard University), Peter Davies(Feinstein Institute for Medical Research), Karen Duff(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
PLoS ONE
July 28, 2016
Cited by 30Open Access
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Abstract

3D volume imaging using iDISCO+ was applied to observe the spatial and temporal progression of tau pathology in deep structures of the brain of a mouse model that recapitulates the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Tau pathology was compared at four timepoints, up to 34 months as it spread through the hippocampal formation and out into the neocortex along an anatomically connected route. Tau pathology was associated with significant gliosis. No evidence for uptake and accumulation of tau by glia was observed. Neuronal cells did appear to have internalized tau, including in extrahippocampal areas as a small proportion of cells that had accumulated human tau protein did not express detectible levels of human tau mRNA. At the oldest timepoint, mature tau pathology in the entorhinal cortex (EC) was associated with significant cell loss. As in human AD, mature tau pathology in the EC and the presence of tau pathology in the neocortex correlated with cognitive impairment. 3D volume imaging is an ideal technique to easily monitor the spread of pathology over time in models of disease progression.


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