Transcriptome analyses of chronic traumatic encephalopathy show alterations in protein phosphatase expression associated with tauopathy.
Jeong-Sun SeoSeungbok LeeJong-Yeon ShinYu Jin HwangHyesun ChoSeong-Keun YooYunha KimSungsu LimYun Kyung KimEun Mi HwangSu Hyun KimChong-Hyun KimSeung Jae HyeonJi-Young YunJihye KimYona KimVictor E AlvarezThor D SteinJunghee LeeDong Jin KimJong-Il KimNeil W KowallHoon RyuAnn C McKeePublished in: Experimental & molecular medicine (2017)
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that is associated with repetitive head injury and has distinctive neuropathological features that differentiate this disease from other neurodegenerative diseases. Intraneuronal tau aggregates, although they occur in different patterns, are diagnostic neuropathological features of CTE, but the precise mechanism of tauopathy is not known in CTE. We performed whole RNA sequencing analysis of post-mortem brain tissue from patients with CTE and compared the results to normal controls to determine the transcriptome signature changes associated with CTE. The results showed that the genes related to the MAP kinase and calcium-signaling pathways were significantly downregulated in CTE. The altered expression of protein phosphatases (PPs) in these networks further suggested that the tauopathy observed in CTE involves common pathological mechanisms similar to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Using cell lines and animal models, we also showed that reduced PPP3CA/PP2B phosphatase activity is directly associated with increases in phosphorylated (p)-tau proteins. These findings provide important insights into PP-dependent neurodegeneration and may lead to novel therapeutic approaches to reduce the tauopathy associated with CTE.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- poor prognosis
- spinal cord injury
- genome wide
- protein kinase
- binding protein
- gene expression
- rna seq
- signaling pathway
- early onset
- multiple sclerosis
- cognitive decline
- protein protein
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- dna methylation
- resting state
- brain injury
- tyrosine kinase
- amino acid
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- optical coherence tomography
- cell proliferation
- genome wide identification