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Brain vasculature accumulates tau and is spatially related to tau tangle pathology in Alzheimer's disease.

Zachary HoglundNancy Ruiz-UribeEric Del SastreBenjamin WoostElizabeth BaderJoshua BaileyBradley T HymanTheodore ZwangRachel E Bennett
Published in: Acta neuropathologica (2024)
Insoluble pathogenic proteins accumulate along blood vessels in conditions of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), exerting a toxic effect on vascular cells and impacting cerebral homeostasis. In this work, we provide new evidence from three-dimensional human brain histology that tau protein, the main component of neurofibrillary tangles, can similarly accumulate along brain vascular segments. We quantitatively assessed n = 6 Alzheimer's disease (AD), and n = 6 normal aging control brains and saw that tau-positive blood vessel segments were present in all AD cases. Tau-positive vessels are enriched for tau at levels higher than the surrounding tissue and appear to affect arterioles across cortical layers (I-V). Further, vessels isolated from these AD tissues were enriched for N-terminal tau and tau phosphorylated at T181 and T217. Importantly, tau-positive vessels are associated with local areas of increased tau neurofibrillary tangles. This suggests that accumulation of tau around blood vessels may reflect a local clearance failure. In sum, these data indicate that tau, like amyloid beta, accumulates along blood vessels and may exert a significant influence on vasculature in the setting of AD.
Keyphrases
  • cerebrospinal fluid
  • cognitive decline
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • cell death
  • brain injury
  • signaling pathway
  • white matter
  • machine learning
  • cerebral ischemia
  • functional connectivity
  • data analysis