Altered tau in rTg4510 mice after a single interfaced CHIMERA traumatic brain injury

Author:

Cheng Wai HangORCID,Cheung Honor,Kang Amy,Fan Jianjia,Cooper Jennifer,Anwer Mehwish,Barron Carlos,Wilkinson Anna,Hu Grace,Yue Jefferey,Cripton Peter A,Vocadlo David,Wellington Cheryl L

Abstract

AbstractTraumatic brain injury (TBI) in an established risk factor for neurodegenerative disease. In this report, we used the Closed Head Injury Model of Engineered Rotational Acceleration (CHIMERA) to study the effects of a single moderate-severe TBI in rTg4510 mice, a mouse model of tauopathy. Fifteen male rTg4510 mice were impacted at 4.0J at 4-mo of age using interfaced CHIMERA and compared to sham controls. Immediately after injury, moderate-severe TBI induced significant mortality (7/15; 47%), and a prolonged duration of loss of righting reflex. At 2-mo post-injury, surviving mice displayed significant histological evidence of microgliosis (Iba1) and axonal injury (Neurosilver). Western blotting showed that TBI mice had a reduced p-GSK-3β (S9):GSK-3β ratio, suggesting greater tau kinase activity. However, tauopathy in surviving TBI mice showed a divergent response, with 3/8 mice having a very low level of tau protein in brain lysates (i.e. lower than sham), and were thus analyzed separately from the other 5/8 TBI mice that maintained the expected level of total tau. Compared to sham controls, TBI mice with normal tau levels had increased p-tau (PHF1 and AT8), increased autophagolysosome accumulation (p62 and Cathepsin D) and decreased hippocampal size. These findings were not observed in TBI mice with low total tau levels. These observations suggest that TBI leads to chronic white matter injury and altered GSK-3β activity. However, post-injury tauopathy and autophagolysosome accumulation diverged in surviving mice through mechanisms that remain to be defined.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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