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Cell
Published

Alzheimer's disease patient-derived high-molecular-weight tau impairs bursting in hippocampal neurons

Authors

Samuel S Harris, Robert Ellingford, Jana Hartmann, Debanjan Dasgupta, Marten Kehring, Rikesh M Rajani, David Graykowski, Noé Quittot, Dhanush Sivasankaran, Caitlin Commins, Zhanyun Fan, Suraya A Bond, Fred Wolf, David Dupret, Raymond J Dolan, Arthur Konnerth, Andreas Neef, Bradley T Hyman, Marc Aurel Busche

Abstract

Cell. 2025 Apr 23:S0092-8674(25)00408-8. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2025.04.006. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Tau accumulation is closely related to cognitive symptoms in Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the cellular drivers of tau-dependent decline of memory-based cognition remain elusive. Here, we employed in vivo Neuropixels and patch-clamp recordings in mouse models and demonstrate that tau, independent of β-amyloid, selectively debilitates complex-spike burst firing of CA1 hippocampal neurons, a fundamental cellular mechanism underpinning learning and memory. Impaired bursting was associated with altered hippocampal network activities that are coupled to burst firing patterns (i.e., theta rhythms and high-frequency ripples) and was concurrent with reduced neuronal expression of CaV2.3 calcium channels, which are essential for burst firing in vivo. We subsequently identify soluble high molecular weight (HMW) tau, isolated from human AD brain, as the tau species responsible for suppression of burst firing. These data provide a cellular mechanism for tau-dependent cognitive decline in AD and implicate a rare species of intracellular HMW tau as a therapeutic target.

PMID:40300603 | DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2025.04.006

UK DRI Authors

Marc Aurel Busche profile picture

Dr Marc Aurel Busche

Group Leader

Understanding and repairing pathological neural circuits in Alzheimer's disease

Dr Marc Aurel Busche