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Lab Invest ; 101(12): 1605-1617, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34462532

ABSTRACT

Synaptic transfer of tau has long been hypothesized from the human pathology pattern and has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, but the precise mechanisms remain unclear. Extracellular vesicles such as exosomes have been suggested as a mechanism, but not all tau is exosomal. The present experiments use a novel flow cytometry assay to quantify depolarization of synaptosomes by KCl after loading with FM2-10, which induces a fluorescence reduction associated with synaptic vesicle release; the degree of reduction in cryopreserved human samples equaled that seen in fresh mouse synaptosomes. Depolarization induced the release of vesicles in the size range of exosomes, along with tetraspanin markers of extracellular vesicles. A number of tau peptides were released, including tau oligomers; released tau was primarily unphosphorylated and C-terminal truncated, with Aß release just above background. When exosomes were immunopurified from release supernatants, a prominent tau band showed a dark smeared appearance of SDS-stable oligomers along with the exosomal marker syntenin-1, and these exosomes induced aggregation in the HEK tau biosensor assay. However, the flow-through did not seed aggregation. Size exclusion chromatography of purified released exosomes shows faint signals from tau in the same fractions that show a CD63 band, an exosomal size signal, and seeding activity. Crude synaptosomes from control, tauopathy, and AD cases demonstrated lower seeding in tauopathy compared to AD that is correlated with the measured Aß42 level. These results show that AD synapses release exosomal tau that is C-terminal-truncated, oligomeric, and with seeding activity that is enhanced by Aß. Taken together with previous findings, these results are consistent with a direct prion-like heterotypic seeding of tau by Aß within synaptic terminals, with subsequent loading of aggregated tau onto exosomes that are released and competent for tau seeding activity.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/metabolism , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism , Synapses/metabolism , Synaptosomes/metabolism , tau Proteins/metabolism , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Alzheimer Disease/pathology , Animals , Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Cerebral Cortex/pathology , Extracellular Vesicles/metabolism , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , Middle Aged , Protein Aggregation, Pathological
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