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UVA researchers discover ‘tauopathies’, possible new treatment for Alzheimer’s

Rebecca Barnabi
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Alzheimer’s researchers at UVA have discovered the harmful effects of tau proteins on brain cells and the damage done to their essential operating instructions.

The finding, referred to as untreatable “tauopathies,” could lead to new treatments. The toxic protein, the researchers found, warps the shape of the nuclei of nerve cells, or neurons. Then alters the function of genes contained inside and reprograms the cells to make more tau.

The protein has long been a prime suspect in Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative “tauopathies,” but the new research from UVA’s Dr. George Bloom, his recently graduated student Dr. Xuehan Sun and collaborators is among the first to identify concrete physical harms that tau causes to neurons. The results offer researchers exciting leads as they work to develop new treatments for Alzheimer’s disease and tauopathies, which are now untreatable.

“A lot of fantastic research has been done by other labs to learn how toxic tau spreads from neuron to neuron in the brain, but very little is known about exactly how this toxic tau damages neurons, and that question is the motivation for our new paper,” Bloom, of UVA’s Departments of Biology, Cell Biology and Neuroscience, as well as the UVA Brain Institute, the Virginia Alzheimer’s Disease Center and UVA’s Program in Fundamental Neuroscience, said. “The toxic tau described here is actually released from neurons, so if we can figure out how to intercept it when it’s floating around in the brain outside of neurons, using antibodies or other drugs, it might be possible to slow or halt progression of Alzheimer’s disease and other tauopathies.”

Tauopathies are characterized by the buildup of tau inside the brain. Alzheimer’s disease is well known, but there are many other tauopathies, including frontotemporal lobar degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy and chronic traumatic encephalopathy. The diseases typically present as dementia, personality changes and/or movement problems. Treatments are not available for non-Alzheimer’s tauopathies, so the UVA researchers were eager to better understand what is happening.

Bloom and his team discovered that tau “oligomers” — assemblages of multiple tau proteins — can have dramatic effects on the normally smooth shape of neuronal nuclei. The oligomers cause the nuclei to fold in on themselves, or “invaginate,” disrupting the genetic material contained within. The physical location and arrangement of genes affects how they work, so the unnatural rearrangement can have dire effects.

“Our discovery that tau oligomers alter the shape of the nucleus drove us to the next step — testing the idea that changes in gene expression are caused by the nuclear shape change,” Bloom said. “That’s exactly what we saw for many genes, and the biggest change is that the gene for tau itself increases its expression almost three-fold. So bad tau might cause more bad tau to be made by neurons — that would be like a snowball rolling downhill.”

The researchers found that patients with Alzheimer’s disease had twice as many invaginated nuclei as people without the condition. Increases were also seen in lab mice used as models of Alzheimer’s and another tauopathy. Additional research into how this process happens could open the door to new ways to prevent and treat Alzheimer’s and other tauopathies.

The findings were published in the scientific journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia. The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Owens Family Foundation, the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund, Rick Sharp Alzheimer’s Foundation, Webb and Tate Wilson and the NanoString nCounter Grant Program.

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