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Publication : Glucocorticoid stress hormones stimulate vesicle-free Tau secretion and spreading in the brain.

First Author  Yu Q Year  2024
Journal  Cell Death Dis Volume  15
Issue  1 Pages  73
PubMed ID  38238309 Mgi Jnum  J:355355
Mgi Id  MGI:7574904 Doi  10.1038/s41419-024-06458-3
Citation  Yu Q, et al. (2024) Glucocorticoid stress hormones stimulate vesicle-free Tau secretion and spreading in the brain. Cell Death Dis 15(1):73
abstractText  Chronic stress and elevated levels of glucocorticoids (GCs), the main stress hormones, accelerate Alzheimer's disease (AD) onset and progression. A major driver of AD progression is the spreading of pathogenic Tau protein between brain regions, precipitated by neuronal Tau secretion. While stress and high GC levels are known to induce intraneuronal Tau pathology (i.e. hyperphosphorylation, oligomerization) in animal models, their role in trans-neuronal Tau spreading is unexplored. Here, we find that GCs promote secretion of full-length, primarily vesicle-free, phosphorylated Tau from murine hippocampal neurons and ex vivo brain slices. This process requires neuronal activity and the kinase GSK3beta. GCs also dramatically enhance trans-neuronal Tau spreading in vivo, and this effect is blocked by an inhibitor of Tau oligomerization and type 1 unconventional protein secretion. These findings uncover a potential mechanism by which stress/GCs stimulate Tau propagation in AD.
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