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Publication : Deletion of Tbk1 disrupts autophagy and reproduces behavioral and locomotor symptoms of FTD-ALS in mice.

First Author  Duan W Year  2019
Journal  Aging (Albany NY) Volume  11
Issue  8 Pages  2457-2476
PubMed ID  31039129 Mgi Jnum  J:290351
Mgi Id  MGI:6434671 Doi  10.18632/aging.101936
Citation  Duan W, et al. (2019) Deletion of Tbk1 disrupts autophagy and reproduces behavioral and locomotor symptoms of FTD-ALS in mice. Aging (Albany NY) 11(8):2457-2476
abstractText  Haploinsufficiency of the protein kinase Tbk1 has shown to cause both amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD); however, the pathogenic mechanisms are unclear. Here we show that conditional neuronal deletion of Tbk1 in leads to cognitive and locomotor deficits in mice. Tbk1-NKO mice exhibited numerous neuropathological changes, including neurofibrillary tangles, abnormal dendrites, reduced dendritic spine density, and cortical synapse loss. The Purkinje cell layer of the cerebellum presented dendritic swelling, abnormally shaped astrocytes, and p62- and ubiquitin-positive aggregates, suggesting impaired autophagy. Inhibition of autophagic flux with bafilomycin A increased total Tkb1 levels in motor neuron-like cells in vitro, suggesting autophagy-dependent degradation of Tbk1. Although Tbk1 over-expression did not affect mutant SOD1 levels in SOD1(G93A)-transfected cells, it increased the soluble/insoluble ratio and reduced the number and size of SOD1(G93A) aggregates. Finally, in vivo experiments showed that Tkb1 expression was reduced in SOD1(G93A) ALS transgenic mice, which showed decreased p62 protein aggregation and extended survival after ICV injection of adeno-associated viral vectors encoding Tbk1. These data shed light on the neuropathological changes that result from Tbk1 deficiency and hint at impaired autophagy as a contributing factor to the cognitive and locomotor deficits that characterize FTD-ALS in patients with Tkb1 haploinsufficiency.
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