Back to Search Start Over

Hypothermic Preconditioning Reverses Tau Ontogenesis in Human Cortical Neurons and is Mimicked by Protein Phosphatase 2A Inhibition

Authors :
Nina M. Rzechorzek
Peter Connick
Matthew R. Livesey
Shyamanga Borooah
Rickie Patani
Karen Burr
David Story
David J.A. Wyllie
Giles E. Hardingham
Siddharthan Chandran
Source :
EBioMedicine, Vol 3, Iss C, Pp 141-154 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2016.

Abstract

Hypothermia is potently neuroprotective, but the molecular basis of this effect remains obscure. Changes in neuronal tau protein are of interest, since tau becomes hyperphosphorylated in injury-resistant, hypothermic brains. Noting inter-species differences in tau isoforms, we have used functional cortical neurons differentiated from human pluripotent stem cells (hCNs) to interrogate tau modulation during hypothermic preconditioning at clinically-relevant temperatures. Key tau developmental transitions (phosphorylation status and splicing shift) are recapitulated during hCN differentiation and subsequently reversed by mild (32 °C) to moderate (28 °C) cooling — conditions which reduce oxidative and excitotoxic stress-mediated injury in hCNs. Blocking a major tau kinase decreases hCN tau phosphorylation and abrogates hypothermic neuroprotection, whilst inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A mimics cooling-induced tau hyperphosphorylation and protects normothermic hCNs from oxidative stress. These findings indicate a possible role for phospho-tau in hypothermic preconditioning, and suggest that cooling drives human tau towards an earlier ontogenic phenotype whilst increasing neuronal resilience to common neurotoxic insults. This work provides a critical step forward in understanding how we might exploit the neuroprotective benefits of cooling without cooling patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23523964
Volume :
3
Issue :
C
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EBioMedicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8ae6dda36b6e4270b99db09d2fa00852
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2015.12.010