Neurobiology of Disease (Feb 2004)
Characterisation of cytoskeletal abnormalities in mice transgenic for wild-type human tau and familial Alzheimer's disease mutants of APP and presenilin-1
Abstract
To study the role of Aβ amyloid deposits in the generation of cytoskeletal lesions, we have generated a transgenic mouse line coexpressing in the same neurons a wild-type human tau isoform (0N3R), a mutant form of APP (751SL) and a mutant form of PS1 (M146L). These mice developed early cerebral extracellular deposits of Aβ, starting at 2.5 months. A somatodendritic neuronal accumulation of transgenic tau protein was observed in tau only and in tau/PS1/APP transgenic mice, including in neurons adjacent to Aβ deposits. The phosphorylation status of this somatodendritic tau was similar in the two transgenic lines. The Aβ deposits were surrounded by a neuritic reaction composed of axonal dystrophic processes, immunoreactive for many phosphotau epitopes and for the human tau transgenic protein. Ultrastructural observation showed in these dystrophic neurites a disorganisation of the microtubule and the neurofilament network but animals that were observed up to 18 months of age did not develop neurofibrillary tangles. These results indicate that overexpression of mutant PS1, mutant APP and of wild-type human tau were not sufficient per se to drive the formation of neurofibrillary tangles in a transgenic model. The Aβ deposits, however, were associated to marked changes in cytoskeletal rganisation and in tau phosphorylation in adjacent dystrophic neurites.