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Showing papers by "Srinivasa Subramaniam published in 2006"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that targeted expression of tau in hippocampal slices provides a novel model to analyze tau modification and spatiotemporal dynamics of t Tau-dependent neurodegeneration in an authentic CNS environment and provides evidence that tau-induced cell death involves apoptotic as well as nonapoptotic mechanisms.
Abstract: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive loss of neurons in selected brain regions, extracellular accumulations of amyloid beta, and intracellular fibrils containing hyperphosphorylated tau. Tau mutations in familial tauopathies confirmed a central role of tau pathology; however, the role of tau alteration and the sequence of tau-dependent neurodegeneration in AD remain elusive. Using Sindbis virus-mediated expression of AD-relevant tau constructs in hippocampal slices, we show that disease-like tau modifications affect tau phosphorylation at selected sites, induce Alz50/MC1-reactive pathological tau conformation, cause accumulation of insoluble tau, and induce region-specific neurodegeneration. Live imaging demonstrates that tau-dependent degeneration is associated with the development of a "ballooned" phenotype, a distinct feature of cell death. Spine density and morphology is not altered as judged from algorithm-based evaluation of dendritic spines, suggesting that synaptic integrity is remarkably stable against tau-dependent degeneration. The data provide evidence that tau-induced cell death involves apoptotic as well as nonapoptotic mechanisms. Furthermore, they demonstrate that targeted expression of tau in hippocampal slices provides a novel model to analyze tau modification and spatiotemporal dynamics of tau-dependent neurodegeneration in an authentic CNS environment.

92 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence suggesting ERK to be a predominant inducer of a non-apoptotic mode of neuronal death and the mechanisms and the putative molecular inter-players associated with ERK-mediated neuronal death are summarized.

87 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The data suggest that MINUS belongs to a new class of MT assembly regulators, which is rich in glycine, threonine, isoleucine, leucine and acidic amino acids.