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Ruan Z, Pathak D, Venkatesan Kalavai S, Yoshii-Kitahara A, Muraoka S, Bhatt N, Takamatsu-Yukawa K, Hu J, Wang Y, Hersh S, Ericsson M, Gorantla S, Gendelman HE, Kayed R, Ikezu S, Luebke JI, Ikezu T. Alzheimer's disease brain-derived extracellular vesicles spread tau pathology in interneurons. Brain. 2021 Feb 12;144(1):288-309. PubMed. Correction.
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National Institute on Aging
This study provides novel and valuable information on the role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in the spread of pathogenic tau oligomers and propagation of tau pathology in AD.
The study’s notable strengths include a powerful demonstration that EVs contain cargo of hyperphosphorylated tau oligomers, important experimental controls (e.g., demonstration of preserved tau cargo after degradation of extravesicular proteins), and immunogold electron microscopy evidence. The data, among other implications, reinforce the view that neuronal EVs may serve as tau biomarkers for clinical and preclinical Alzheimer’s disease, something that my lab and others have been advocating for some time.
Moreover, particularly important is the evidence that EVs of Alzheimer’s patients are more capable of seeding tau pathology in old mice than are purified tau oligomers or fibrils. This suggests that blocking the release of EVs containing tau seeds or blocking their uptake by unaffected neurons may have therapeutic potential in AD.
Finally, the finding that pathogenic EVs preferentially target GABAergic neurons, at least in mice, opens avenues for future research, as it is not immediately clear which characteristics of GABAergic neurons are responsible for this preferential targeting.
Overall, this study strengthens the view that EVs are important for AD pathogenesis and provides strong motivation for continued research on the topic.
View all comments by Dimitrios KapogiannisShanghai Qiangrui Biotech Co., Ltd
DZNE (German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases)
The Ikezu lab has published a series of pioneering papers on the role of exosomes/extracellular vesicles (EVs) in neurodegeneration, notably the role of exosomes in the spreading of tau pathology via microglia (Asai et al., 2015). The distinction between exosomes and EVs tends to be fuzzy, depending on size (exosomes are smaller, <100 nm) and other criteria. In this new study, Ruan et al. used the more general term EVs, but similar preparation as before.
They compared the physicochemical structure and pathogenic function of EVs isolated from brains of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), prodromal Alzheimer’s disease (pAD), and non-demented control cases. They found that AD EVs contained a much higher amount of epitope-specific tau oligomers (positive for tau-monomer-specific antibody TOMA1 and TOMA2, but not for TOMA3) than pAD and control EVs.
In vitro, compared with pAD and control EVs, AD EVs showed higher uptake and transfer efficiency of tau to cultured murine neurons and higher seeding activity measured by a FRET-based seeding assay. In vivo, pAD and AD EVs were more efficient in seeding and propagating tau pathology than control EVs and isolated tau oligomers and fibrils. The evidence is that the inoculation of AD or pAD EVs (containing only 300 pg of tau) into the outer molecular layer of the dentate gyrus of wild-type mice induced aggregation of endogenous tau demonstrated by the formation of sarkosyl insoluble tau, whereas inoculation of an equal amount of tau from control extracellular vesicles, isolated tau oligomers, or fibrils from the same Alzheimer’s disease donor showed little tau pathology, as judged by AT8 positive staining.
Intriguingly, pAD or AD EVs preferentially mediated tau propagation in GABAergic interneurons. They did so to a much lesser extent in excitatory mossy cells positive for glutamate receptors 2/3, leading to reduced GABAergic transmission in this region. This study raises several interesting questions.
The authors noted that inoculation of AD or pAD EVs in mouse brain induced AT8-positive tau in female mice but not in male mice, but they did not show the results and did not comment on this phenomenon. Given the different occurrence of AD between men and women, it would be interesting to test whether such EVs displayed different seeding activity between male and female mice.
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