Tau pathology epigenetically remodels the neuron-glial cross-talk in Alzheimer's disease.

Journal: Science Advances
Published:
Abstract

The neuron-glia cross-talk is critical to brain homeostasis and is particularly affected by neurodegenerative diseases. How neurons manipulate the neuron-astrocyte interaction under pathological conditions, such as hyperphosphorylated tau, a pathological hallmark in Alzheimer's disease (AD), remains elusive. In this study, we identified excessively elevated neuronal expression of adenosine receptor 1 (Adora1 or A1R) in 3×Tg mice, MAPT P301L (rTg4510) mice, patients with AD, and patient-derived neurons. The up-regulation of A1R was found to be tau pathology dependent and posttranscriptionally regulated by Mef2c via miR-133a-3p. Rebuilding the miR-133a-3p/A1R signal effectively rescued synaptic and memory impairments in AD mice. Furthermore, neuronal A1R promoted the release of lipocalin 2 (Lcn2) and resulted in astrocyte activation. Last, silencing neuronal Lcn2 in AD mice ameliorated astrocyte activation and restored synaptic plasticity and learning/memory. Our findings reveal that the tau pathology remodels neuron-glial cross-talk and promotes neurodegenerative progression. Approaches targeting A1R and modulating this signaling pathway might be a potential therapeutic strategy for AD.

Authors
Lan-ting Zhou, Dan Liu, Hui-cong Kang, Lu Lu, He-zhou Huang, Wen-qing Ai, Yang Zhou, Man-fei Deng, Hao Li, Zhi-qiang Liu, Wei-feng Zhang, Ya-zhuo Hu, Zhi-tao Han, Hong-hong Zhang, Jian-jun Jia, Avijite Sarkar, Saldin Sharaydeh, Jie Wang, Heng-ye Man, Marcel Schilling, Lars Bertram, Youming Lu, Ziyuan Guo, Ling-qiang Zhu
Relevant Conditions

Alzheimer's Disease, Dementia