Tau polarizes an aging transcriptional signature to excitatory neurons and glia.
Timothy WuJennifer M DegerHui YeCaiwei GuoJustin DhindsaBrandon T PekarekRami Al-OuranZhandong LiuIsmael Al-RamahiJuan BotasJoshua M ShulmanPublished in: eLife (2023)
Aging is a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD), and cell-type vulnerability underlies its characteristic clinical manifestations. We have performed longitudinal, single-cell RNA-sequencing in Drosophila with pan-neuronal expression of human tau, which forms AD neurofibrillary tangle pathology. Whereas tau- and aging-induced gene expression strongly overlap (93%), they differ in the affected cell types. In contrast to the broad impact of aging, tau-triggered changes are strongly polarized to excitatory neurons and glia. Further, tau can either activate or suppress innate immune gene expression signatures in a cell type-specific manner. Integration of cellular abundance and gene expression pinpoints Nuclear Factor Kappa B signaling in neurons as a marker for cellular vulnerability. We also highlight the conservation of cell type-specific transcriptional patterns between Drosophila and human postmortem brain tissue. Overall, our results create a resource for dissection of dynamic, age-dependent gene expression changes at cellular resolution in a genetically tractable model of tauopathy.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- nuclear factor
- single cell
- cerebrospinal fluid
- dna methylation
- endothelial cells
- toll like receptor
- spinal cord
- rna seq
- climate change
- innate immune
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- poor prognosis
- high glucose
- high throughput
- genome wide
- cognitive decline
- immune response
- cell therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single molecule
- mesenchymal stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- resting state
- functional connectivity