GSK-3β-induced Tau pathology drives hippocampal neuronal cell death in Huntington's disease: involvement of astrocyte-neuron interactions.
F L'EpiscopoJ Drouin-OuelletC TiroloA PulvirentiR GiugnoN TestaS CanigliaM F SerapideG CisbaniR A BarkerF CicchettiBianca MarchettiPublished in: Cell death & disease (2016)
Glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK-3β) has emerged as a critical factor in several pathways involved in hippocampal neuronal maintenance and function. In Huntington's disease (HD), there are early hippocampal deficits both in patients and transgenic mouse models, which prompted us to investigate whether disease-specific changes in GSK-3β expression may underlie these abnormalities. Thirty-three postmortem hippocampal samples from HD patients (neuropathological grades 2-4) and age- and sex-matched normal control cases were analyzed using real-time quantitative reverse transcription PCRs (qPCRs) and immunohistochemistry. In vitro and in vivo studies looking at hippocampal pathology and GSK-3β were also undertaken in transgenic R6/2 and wild-type mice. We identified a disease and stage-dependent upregulation of GSK-3β mRNA and protein levels in the HD hippocampus, with the active isoform pGSK-3β-Tyr(216) being strongly expressed in dentate gyrus (DG) neurons and astrocytes at a time when phosphorylation of Tau at the AT8 epitope was also present in these same neurons. This upregulation of pGSK-3β-Tyr(216) was also found in the R6/2 hippocampus in vivo and linked to the increased vulnerability of primary hippocampal neurons in vitro. In addition, the increased expression of GSK-3β in the astrocytes of R6/2 mice appeared to be the main driver of Tau phosphorylation and caspase3 activation-induced neuronal death, at least in part via an exacerbated production of major proinflammatory mediators. This stage-dependent overactivation of GSK-3β in HD-affected hippocampal neurons and astrocytes therefore points to GSK-3β as being a critical factor in the pathological development of this condition. As such, therapeutic targeting of this pathway may help ameliorate neuronal dysfunction in HD.
Keyphrases
- cerebral ischemia
- signaling pathway
- pi k akt
- poor prognosis
- cell death
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- end stage renal disease
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- spinal cord
- ejection fraction
- wild type
- temporal lobe epilepsy
- chronic kidney disease
- cell proliferation
- newly diagnosed
- induced apoptosis
- prognostic factors
- high glucose
- long non coding rna
- binding protein
- cell cycle arrest
- type diabetes
- spinal cord injury
- climate change
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- diabetic rats
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- drug delivery
- drug induced
- tyrosine kinase
- amino acid