Late-stage Anle138b treatment ameliorates tau pathology and metabolic decline in a mouse model of human Alzheimer's disease tau
Creators
- Brendel, Matthias1
- Deussing, Maximilian1
- Blume, Tanja1
- Kaiser, Lena1
- Probst, Federico1
- Overhoff, Felix1
- Peters, Finn2
- von Ungern-Sternberg, Barbara1
- Ryazanov, Sergey3
- Leonov, Andrei3
- Griesinger, Christian3
- Zwergal, Andreas4
- Levin, Johannes4
- Bartenstein, Peter1
- Yakushev, Igor5
- Cumming, Paul6
- Boening, Guido1
- Ziegler, Sibylle1
- Herms, Jochen2
- Giese, Armin2
- Rominger, Axel1
- 1. Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Marchioninistr.15, 81377, Munich, Germany
- 2. German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Munich, Germany
- 3. Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany
- 4. Department of Neurology, University Hospital, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany
- 5. Neuroimaging Center (TUM-NIC), Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany
- 6. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Inselspital Bern, Bern, Switzerland
Description
Background: Augmenting the brain clearance of toxic oligomers with small molecule modulators constitutes a promising therapeutic concept against tau deposition. However, there has been no test of this concept in animal models of Alzheimer's disease (AD) with initiation at a late disease stage. Thus, we aimed to investigate the effects of interventional late-stage Anle138b treatment, which previously indicated great potential to inhibit oligomer accumulation by binding of pathological aggregates, on the metabolic decline in transgenic mice with established tauopathy in a longitudinal 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) study.
Methods: Twelve transgenic mice expressing all six human tau isoforms (hTau) and ten controls were imaged by FDG-PET at baseline (14.5 months), followed by randomization into Anle138b treatment and vehicle groups for 3 months. FDG-PET was repeated after treatment for 3 months, and brains were analyzed by tau immunohistochemistry. Longitudinal changes of glucose metabolism were compared between study groups, and the end point tau load was correlated with individual FDG-PET findings.
Results: Tau pathology was significantly ameliorated by late-stage Anle138b treatment when compared to vehicle (frontal cortex − 53%, p < 0.001; hippocampus − 59%, p < 0.005). FDG-PET revealed a reversal of metabolic decline during Anle138b treatment, whereas the vehicle group showed ongoing deterioration. End point glucose metabolism in the brain of hTau mice had a strong correlation with tau deposition measured by immunohistochemistry (R = 0.92, p < 0.001).
Conclusion: Late-stage oligomer modulation effectively ameliorated tau pathology in hTau mice and rescued metabolic function. Molecular imaging by FDG-PET can serve for monitoring effects of Anle138b treatment.
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