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Functional screening of Alzheimer risk loci identifies PTK2B as an in vivo modulator and early marker of Tau pathology

Authors :
M-C Galas
Yoann Sottejeau
Hélène Obriot
Cloé Dupont
F Abdelfettah
Alexis Bretteville
Raphaëlle Caillierez
Benjamin Grenier-Boley
Nicolas Malmanche
Pierre Dourlen
Nicolas Sergeant
Bart Dermaut
Julien Chapuis
Charlotte Delay
Francisco-Jose Fernandez-Gomez
Luc Buée
Hilkka Soininen
Mikko Hiltunen
P. Amouyel
Céline Bellenguez
J-C Lambert
School of Medicine / Clinical Medicine
School of Medicine / Biomedicine
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry, MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

A recent genome-wide association meta-analysis for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) identified 19 risk loci (in addition to APOE) in which the functional genes are unknown. Using Drosophila, we screened 296 constructs targeting orthologs of 54 candidate risk genes within these loci for their ability to modify Tau neurotoxicity by quantifying the size of >6000 eyes. Besides Drosophila Amph (ortholog of BIN1), which we previously implicated in Tau pathology, we identified p130CAS (CASS4), Eph (EPHA1), Fak (PTK2B) and Rab3-GEF (MADD) as Tau toxicity modulators. Of these, the focal adhesion kinase Fak behaved as a strong Tau toxicity suppressor in both the eye and an independent focal adhesion-related wing blister assay. Accordingly, the human Tau and PTK2B proteins biochemically interacted in vitro and PTK2B co-localized with hyperphosphorylated and oligomeric Tau in progressive pathological stages in the brains of AD patients and transgenic Tau mice. These data indicate that PTK2B acts as an early marker and in vivo modulator of Tau toxicity.<br />published version<br />peerReviewed

Details

ISSN :
14765578 and 13594184
Volume :
22
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....70cf6d1b220eabe8b358f72c230764ae