Astrocyte-secreted glypican-4 drives APOE4-dependent tau hyperphosphorylation.
Sivaprakasam R SarojaKirill GorbachevTcw JuliaAlison Mary GoateAna C PereiraPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Tau protein aggregates are a major driver of neurodegeneration and behavioral impairments in tauopathies, including in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Apolipoprotein E4 ( APOE4 ), the highest genetic risk factor for late-onset AD, has been shown to exacerbate tau hyperphosphorylation in mouse models. However, the exact mechanisms through which APOE4 induces tau hyperphosphorylation remains unknown. Here, we report that the astrocyte-secreted protein glypican-4 (GPC-4), which we identify as a binding partner of APOE4, drives tau hyperphosphorylation. We discovered that first, GPC-4 preferentially interacts with APOE4 in comparison to APOE2, considered to be a protective allele to AD, and second, that postmortem APOE4-carrying AD brains highly express GPC-4 in neurotoxic astrocytes. Furthermore, the astrocyte-secreted GPC-4 induced both tau accumulation and propagation in vitro. CRISPR/dCas9-mediated activation of GPC-4 in a tauopathy mouse model robustly induced tau hyperphosphorylation. In the absence of GPC4, APOE4-induced tau hyperphosphorylation was largely diminished using in vitro tau fluorescence resonance energy transfer-biosensor cells, in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived astrocytes and in an in vivo mouse model. We further show that APOE4-mediated surface trafficking of APOE receptor low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 through GPC-4 can be a gateway to tau spreading. Collectively, these data support that APOE4-induced tau hyperphosphorylation is directly mediated by GPC-4.
Keyphrases
- cognitive decline
- cerebrospinal fluid
- high fat diet
- mouse model
- high glucose
- energy transfer
- diabetic rats
- mild cognitive impairment
- late onset
- endothelial cells
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- insulin resistance
- binding protein
- induced apoptosis
- transcription factor
- human immunodeficiency virus
- quantum dots
- dna methylation
- dna binding
- big data
- amino acid
- protein protein
- signaling pathway
- hiv infected
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- data analysis