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Extracellular tau oligomers affect extracellular glutamate handling by astrocytes through downregulation of GLT-1 expression and impairment of NKA1A2 function

Authors :
Domenica Donatella Li Puma
Cristian Ripoli
Giulia Puliatti
Francesco Pastore
Giacomo Lazzarino
Barbara Tavazzi
Ottavio Arancio
Roberto Piacentini
Claudio Grassi
Source :
Neuropathology and applied neurobiology. 48(5)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Several studies reported that astrocytes support neuronal communication by the release of gliotransmitters, including ATP and glutamate. Astrocytes also play a fundamental role in buffering extracellular glutamate in the synaptic cleft, thus limiting the risk of excitotoxicity in neurons. We previously demonstrated that extracellular tau oligomers (ex-oTau), by specifically targeting astrocytes, affect glutamate-dependent synaptic transmission via a reduction in gliotransmitter release. The aim of this work was to determine if ex-oTau also impair the ability of astrocytes to uptake extracellular glutamate, thus further contributing to ex-oTau-dependent neuronal dysfunction.Primary cultures of astrocytes and organotypic brain slices were exposed to ex-oTau (200 nM) for 1 h. Extracellular glutamate buffering by astrocytes was studied by: NaEx-oTau uploading in astrocytes significantly affected glutamate-transporter-1 expression and function, thus impinging on glutamate buffering activity. Ex-oTau also reduced Na-K-ATPase activity because of pump mislocalisation on the plasma membrane, with no significant changes in expression. This effect was independent of oTau internalisation and it caused NaEx-oTau exerted a complex action on astrocytes, at both intracellular and extracellular levels. The net effect was dysregulated glutamate signalling in terms of both release and uptake that relied on reduced expression of glutamate-transporter-1, altered function and localisation of NKA1A1, and NKA1A2. Consequently, Na

Details

ISSN :
13652990
Volume :
48
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuropathology and applied neurobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6a5f43e8ab7f1de2df1faf2c1768427c