Journal of Neuroinflammation (Sep 2018)
Genetically enhancing the expression of chemokine domain of CX3CL1 fails to prevent tau pathology in mouse models of tauopathy
Abstract
Abstract Background Fractalkine (CX3CL1) and its receptor (CX3CR1) play an important role in regulating microglial function. We have previously shown that Cx 3 cr1 deficiency exacerbated tau pathology and led to cognitive impairment. However, it is still unclear if the chemokine domain of the ligand CX3CL1 is essential in regulating neuronal tau pathology. Methods We used transgenic mice lacking endogenous Cx 3 cl1 (Cx 3 cl1 −/−) and expressing only obligatory soluble form (with only chemokine domain) and lacking the mucin stalk of CX3CL1 (referred to as Cx 3 cl1 105Δ mice) to assess tau pathology and behavioral function in both lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and genetic (hTau) mouse models of tauopathy. Results First, increased basal tau levels accompanied microglial activation in Cx 3 cl1 105Δ mice compared to control groups. Second, increased CD45+ and F4/80+ neuroinflammation and tau phosphorylation were observed in LPS, hTau/Cx 3 cl1 −/−, and hTau/Cx 3 cl1 105Δ mouse models of tau pathology, which correlated with impaired spatial learning. Finally, microglial cell surface expression of CX3CR1 was reduced in Cx 3 cl1 105Δ mice, suggesting enhanced fractalkine receptor internalization (mimicking Cx 3 cr1 deletion), which likely contributes to the elevated tau pathology. Conclusions Collectively, our data suggest that overexpression of only chemokine domain of CX3CL1 does not protect against tau pathology.
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