Seeding patient-derived tau induces tauopathy-specific aggregation and lysosomal disruption in human cells
Kavanagh, T.; Strobbe, A.; Balcomb, K.; Agius, C.; Gao, J.; Genoud, S.; Kanshin, E.; Ueberheide, B.; Kassiou, M.; Werry, E.; Halliday, G.; Drummond, E.
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BackgroundTau aggregation is the defining feature of tauopathies, however, the mechanisms by which distinct tau strains drive disease-specific responses remain unclear. Existing models largely rely on recombinant tau seeding or tau overexpression, which fail to capture the biochemical diversity of pathological tau. The aim of this study was to develop a robust and reproducible human cell-based model of disease-specific tau pathology and to use this model to determine how tau from unique diseases impact tau accumulation and lysosomal dysfunction. MethodsPatient-derived tau aggregates were enriched from post-mortem brain tissue obtained from sporadic Alzheimers disease (AD), Picks disease (PiD), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and control cases using phosphotungstic acid precipitation. Patient-derived tau preparations were biochemically characterised by immunoblotting and mass spectrometry and normalised for tau content prior to seeding. Patient-derived tau aggregates were seeded into multiple human immortalised cell lines (SH-SY5Y, M03.13, U-87 MG, and U-118 MG cells) and iPSC-derived astrocytes. Tau seeding efficiency, aggregate morphology, and integrity of the autophagy-lysosomal pathway was assessed using quantitative imaging approaches. ResultsPatient-derived tau seeds retained disease-specific phosphorylation patterns and isoform composition and led to reproducible, dose-dependent insoluble tau accumulation in all cell lines tested. Despite equivalent tau input and similar background protein composition, PiD-derived tau had the most aggressive pathological signature, showing the highest number of tau aggregates per cell and inducing system wide disruptions in the autophagy lysosomal system including increased SQSTM1 puncta and lysosomal damage markers. Seeding with AD-derived tau led to a high number of tau aggregates per cell and more specifically depleted the lysosomal protease CTSD and uniquely co-seeded A{beta} pathology. Seeding with PSP-derived tau resulted in only a moderate number of tau aggregates per cell and uniquely caused increased lysosomal biogenesis. ConclusionsTogether, these results demonstrate that intrinsic properties of human tau strains drive disease-specific cellular responses and establish a scalable, physiologically relevant platform for dissecting tau-cell interactions and screening therapeutics across tauopathies.
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