作者
Min-Kyoo Shin,Edwin Vázquez‐Rosa,Yeojung Koh,Matasha Dhar,Kalyani Chaubey,Coral J. Cintrón-Pérez,Sarah Barker,Emiko Miller,Kathryn Franke,Maria Noterman,Divya Seth,Rachael S Allen,Cara Motz,Sriganesh Ramachandra Rao,Lara A. Skelton,Machelle T. Pardue,Steven J. Fliesler,Chao Wang,Tara E. Tracy,Li Gan,Daniel J. Liebl,Jude Savarraj,Glenda Torres,Hilda Ahnstedt,Louise D. McCullough,Ryan S. Kitagawa,H. Alex Choi,Pengyue Zhang,Yuan Hou,ChienWei Chiang,Lang Li,Francisco Ortiz,Jessica A. Kilgore,Noelle S. Williams,Victoria C. Whitehair,Tamar Gefen,Margaret E. Flanagan,Jonathan S. Stamler,Mukesh K. Jain,Allison Kraus,Feixiong Cheng,James D. Reynolds,Andrew A. Pieper
摘要
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the largest non-genetic, non-aging related risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). We report here that TBI induces tau acetylation (ac-tau) at sites acetylated also in human AD brain. This is mediated by S-nitrosylated-GAPDH, which simultaneously inactivates Sirtuin1 deacetylase and activates p300/CBP acetyltransferase, increasing neuronal ac-tau. Subsequent tau mislocalization causes neurodegeneration and neurobehavioral impairment, and ac-tau accumulates in the blood. Blocking GAPDH S-nitrosylation, inhibiting p300/CBP, or stimulating Sirtuin1 all protect mice from neurodegeneration, neurobehavioral impairment, and blood and brain accumulation of ac-tau after TBI. Ac-tau is thus a therapeutic target and potential blood biomarker of TBI that may represent pathologic convergence between TBI and AD. Increased ac-tau in human AD brain is further augmented in AD patients with history of TBI, and patients receiving the p300/CBP inhibitors salsalate or diflunisal exhibit decreased incidence of AD and clinically diagnosed TBI.