Back to Search Start Over

High-content image-based analysis and proteomic profiling identifies Tau phosphorylation inhibitors in a human iPSC-derived glutamatergic neuronal model of tauopathy

Authors :
Picower Institute for Learning and Memory
Cheng, Chialin
Reis, Surya A
Adams, Emily T
Fass, Daniel M
Angus, Steven P
Stuhlmiller, Timothy J
Richardson, Jared
Olafson, Hailey
Wang, Eric T
Patnaik, Debasis
Beauchamp, Roberta L
Feldman, Danielle A
Silva, M Catarina
Sur, Mriganka
Johnson, Gary L
Ramesh, Vijaya
Miller, Bruce L
Temple, Sally
Kosik, Kenneth S
Dickerson, Bradford C
Haggarty, Stephen J
Picower Institute for Learning and Memory
Cheng, Chialin
Reis, Surya A
Adams, Emily T
Fass, Daniel M
Angus, Steven P
Stuhlmiller, Timothy J
Richardson, Jared
Olafson, Hailey
Wang, Eric T
Patnaik, Debasis
Beauchamp, Roberta L
Feldman, Danielle A
Silva, M Catarina
Sur, Mriganka
Johnson, Gary L
Ramesh, Vijaya
Miller, Bruce L
Temple, Sally
Kosik, Kenneth S
Dickerson, Bradford C
Haggarty, Stephen J
Source :
Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mutations in MAPT (microtubule-associated protein tau) cause frontotemporal dementia (FTD). MAPT mutations are associated with abnormal tau phosphorylation levels and accumulation of misfolded tau protein that can propagate between neurons ultimately leading to cell death (tauopathy). Recently, a p.A152T tau variant was identifed as a risk factor for FTD, Alzheimer’s disease, and synucleinopathies. Here we used induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) from a patient carrying this p.A152T variant to create a robust, functional cellular assay system for probing pathophysiological tau accumulation and phosphorylation. Using stably transduced iPSC-derived neural progenitor cells engineered to enable inducible expression of the pro-neural transcription factor Neurogenin 2 (Ngn2), we generated disease-relevant, cortical-like glutamatergic neurons in a scalable, high-throughput screening compatible format. Utilizing automated confocal microscopy, and an advanced imageprocessing pipeline optimized for analysis of morphologically complex human neuronal cultures, we report quantitative, subcellular localization-specifc efects of multiple kinase inhibitors on tau, including ones under clinical investigation not previously reported to afect tau phosphorylation. These results demonstrate the potential for using patient iPSC-derived ex vivo models of tauopathy as genetically accurate, disease-relevant systems to probe tau biochemistry and support the discovery of novel therapeutics for tauopathies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342473899
Document Type :
Electronic Resource