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Dive into the research topics where Hana N. Dawson is active.

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Featured researches published by Hana N. Dawson.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Tau is essential to β-amyloid-induced neurotoxicity

Mark Rapoport; Hana N. Dawson; Lester I. Binder; Michael P. Vitek; Adriana Ferreira

Senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, the two hallmark lesions of Alzheimers disease, are the results of the pathological deposition of proteins normally present throughout the brain. Senile plaques are extracellular deposits of fibrillar β-amyloid peptide (Aβ); neurofibrillary tangles represent intracellular bundles of self-assembled hyperphosphorylated tau proteins. Although these two lesions are often present in the same brain areas, a mechanistic link between them has yet to be established. In the present study, we analyzed whether tau plays a key role in fibrillar Aβ-induced neurite degeneration in central neurons. Cultured hippocampal neurons obtained from wild-type, tau knockout, and human tau transgenic mice were treated with fibrillar Aβ. Morphological analysis indicated that neurons expressing either mouse or human tau proteins degenerated in the presence of Aβ. On the other hand, tau-depleted neurons showed no signs of degeneration in the presence of Aβ. These results provide direct evidence supporting a key role for tau in the mechanisms leading to Aβ-induced neurodegeneration in the central nervous system. In addition, the analysis of the composition of the cytoskeleton of tau-depleted neurons suggested that the formation of more dynamic microtubules might confer resistance to Aβ-mediated neurodegeneration.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Tau protein is required for amyloid {beta}-induced impairment of hippocampal long-term potentiation.

Olivia A. Shipton; Julie R. Leitz; Jenny Dworzak; Christine E. J. Acton; E M Tunbridge; Franziska Denk; Hana N. Dawson; Michael P. Vitek; Richard Wade-Martins; Ole Paulsen; Mariana Vargas-Caballero

Amyloid β (Aβ) and tau protein are both implicated in memory impairment, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and early Alzheimers disease (AD), but whether and how they interact is unknown. Consequently, we asked whether tau protein is required for the robust phenomenon of Aβ-induced impairment of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), a widely accepted cellular model of memory. We used wild-type mice and mice with a genetic knock-out of tau protein and recorded field potentials in an acute slice preparation. We demonstrate that the absence of tau protein prevents Aβ-induced impairment of LTP. Moreover, we show that Aβ increases tau phosphorylation and that a specific inhibitor of the tau kinase glycogen synthase kinase 3 blocks the increased tau phosphorylation induced by Aβ and prevents Aβ-induced impairment of LTP in wild-type mice. Together, these findings show that tau protein is required for Aβ to impair synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus and suggest that the Aβ-induced impairment of LTP is mediated by tau phosphorylation. We conclude that preventing the interaction between Aβ and tau could be a promising strategy for treating cognitive impairment in MCI and early AD.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2009

Tau--an inhibitor of deacetylase HDAC6 function.

Mar Pérez; Ismael Santa-Maria; Elena Gómez de Barreda; Xiongwei Zhu; Raquel Cuadros; José Román Cabrero; Francisco Sánchez-Madrid; Hana N. Dawson; Michael P. Vitek; George Perry; Mark A. Smith; Jesús Avila

Analysis of brain microtubule protein from patients with Alzheimer’s disease showed decreased alpha tubulin levels along with increased acetylation of the alpha tubulin subunit, mainly in those microtubules from neurons containing neurofibrillary tau pathology. To determine the relationship of tau protein and increased tubulin acetylation, we studied the effect of tau on the acetylation‐deacetylation of tubulin. Our results indicate that tau binds to the tubulin‐deacetylase, histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6), decreasing its activity with a consequent increase in tubulin acetylation. As expected, increased acetylation was also found in tubulin from wild‐type mice compared with tubulin from mice lacking tau because of the tau‐mediated inhibition of the deacetylase. In addition, we found that an excess of tau protein, as a HDAC6 inhibitor, prevents induction of autophagy by inhibiting proteasome function.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

Amyloid-β oligomers induce synaptic damage via Tau-dependent microtubule severing by TTLL6 and spastin

Hans Zempel; Julia Luedtke; Yatender Kumar; Jacek Biernat; Hana N. Dawson; Eckhard Mandelkow; Eva-Maria Mandelkow

Mislocalization and aggregation of Aβ and Tau combined with loss of synapses and microtubules (MTs) are hallmarks of Alzheimer disease. We exposed mature primary neurons to Aβ oligomers and analysed changes in the Tau/MT system. MT breakdown occurs in dendrites invaded by Tau (Tau missorting) and is mediated by spastin, an MT‐severing enzyme. Spastin is recruited by MT polyglutamylation, induced by Tau missorting triggered translocalization of TTLL6 (Tubulin‐Tyrosine‐Ligase‐Like‐6) into dendrites. Consequences are spine loss and mitochondria and neurofilament mislocalization. Missorted Tau is not axonally derived, as shown by axonal retention of photoconvertible Dendra2‐Tau, but newly synthesized. Recovery from Aβ insult occurs after Aβ oligomers lose their toxicity and requires the kinase MARK (Microtubule‐Affinity‐Regulating‐Kinase). In neurons derived from Tau‐knockout mice, MTs and synapses are resistant to Aβ toxicity because TTLL6 mislocalization and MT polyglutamylation are prevented; hence no spastin recruitment and no MT breakdown occur, enabling faster recovery. Reintroduction of Tau re‐establishes Aβ‐induced toxicity in TauKO neurons, which requires phosphorylation of Taus KXGS motifs. Transgenic mice overexpressing Tau show TTLL6 translocalization into dendrites and decreased MT stability. The results provide a rationale for MT stabilization as a therapeutic approach.


Current Microbiology | 1997

Stable transformation of Chlorella : Rescue of nitrate reductase-deficient mutants with the nitrate reductase gene

Hana N. Dawson; Richard Burlingame; Andrew C. Cannons

Abstract. Unicellular green algae, like Chlorella, offer a potentially useful system for the expression of heterologous proteins. However, the development of Chlorella as a bioreactor has been delayed owing to the lack of a stable transformation technique. Here we report on the use of micro-projectile bombardment to introduce the nitrate reductase (NR) gene from Chlorella vulgaris into NR-deficient Chlorella sorokiniana mutants, resulting in stable transformants. The stable transformants were able to grow on nitrate medium after repeated passages between selective and nonselective medium and exhibited inducible nitrate reductase activity comparable to that of wild-type cells. Southern analysis suggests homologous recombination occurs with insertion of the wild type gene into the mutated gene and that the genes of the two Chlorellaspecies used are very similar. Specific RNase protection assays, selecting for a poorly conserved region of the gene, identified the presence of the C. vulgaris NR transcript only in the transformed C. sorkiniana mutant and not in the mutant.


Neuroscience | 2010

Loss of tau elicits axonal degeneration in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.

Hana N. Dawson; Viviana Cantillana; Marilyn Jansen; Haichen Wang; Michael P. Vitek; Donna M. Wilcock; John R. Lynch; Daniel T. Laskowitz

A central issue in the pathogenesis of tauopathy is the question of how tau protein dysfunction leads to neurodegeneration. We have previously demonstrated that the absence of tau protein is associated with destabilization of microtubules and impaired neurite outgrowth (Dawson et al., 2001; Rapoport et al., 2002). We now hypothesize that the absence of functional tau protein may render the central nervous system more vulnerable to secondary insults such as the overexpression of mutated beta amyloid precursor protein (APP) and traumatic brain injury. We therefore crossed tau knockout mice (Dawson et al., 2001) to mice overexpressing a mutated human APP (APP(670,671), A(sw)) (Hsiao et al., 1996) and created a mouse model (A(sw)/mTau(-/-)) that provides evidence that the loss of tau function causes degeneration of neuronal processes. The overexpression of APP(670,671) in tau knockout mice, elicits the extensive formation of axonal spheroids. While spheroids are only found associated with Abeta plaques in mice expressing APP(670,671) on an endogenous mouse tau background (Irizarry et al., 1997), A(sw)/mTau(-/-) mice have spheroids not only surrounding Abeta plaques but also in white matter tracks and in the neuropil. Plaque associated and neuropil dystrophic neurites and spheroids are prominent features of Alzheimers disease (Masliah et al., 1993; Terry, 1996; Stokin et al., 2005), and our current data suggests that loss of tau function may lead to neurodegeneration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

NO synthase 2 (NOS2) deletion promotes multiple pathologies in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease

Carol A. Colton; Michael P. Vitek; David A. Wink; Qing Xu; Viviana Cantillana; Mary Lou Previti; W E Van Nostrand; J. B. Weinberg; Hana N. Dawson

Alzheimers disease is characterized by two primary pathological features: amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. The interconnection between amyloid and tau aggregates is of intense interest, but mouse models have yet to reveal a direct interrelationship. We now show that NO may be a key factor that connects amyloid and tau pathologies. Genetic removal of NO synthase 2 in mice expressing mutated amyloid precursor protein results in pathological hyperphosphorylation of mouse tau, its redistribution to the somatodendritic compartment in cortical and hippocampal neurons, and aggregate formation. Lack of NO synthase 2 in the amyloid precursor protein Swedish mutant mouse increased insoluble β-amyloid peptide levels, neuronal degeneration, caspase-3 activation, and tau cleavage, suggesting that NO acts at a junction point between β-amyloid peptides, caspase activation, and tau aggregation.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2010

Tau-knockout mice show reduced GSK3-induced hippocampal degeneration and learning deficits

Elena Gómez de Barreda; Mar Pérez; Pilar Gómez Ramos; Javier de Cristóbal; Patricia Martín-Maestro; Asunción Morán; Hana N. Dawson; Michael P. Vitek; José J. Lucas; Félix Hernández; Jesús Avila

It has been proposed that deregulation of neuronal glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) activity may be a key feature in Alzheimer disease pathogenesis. We have previously generated transgenic mice that overexpress GSK3beta in forebrain regions including dentate gyrus (DG), a region involved in learning and memory acquisition. We have found that GSK3 overexpression results in DG degeneration. To test whether tau protein modified by GSK3 plays a role in that neurodegeneration, we have brought GSK3 overexpressing mice to a tau knockout background. Our results indicate that the toxic effect of GSK3 overexpression is milder and slower in the absence of tau. Thus, we suggest that the hyperphosphorylated tau mediates, at least in part, the pathology observed in the brain of GSK3 overexpressing mice.


Neuroscience | 2007

An apolipoprotein E-based therapeutic improves outcome and reduces Alzheimer's disease pathology following closed head injury: evidence of pharmacogenomic interaction.

Haichen Wang; Lori Durham; Hana N. Dawson; Pingping Song; David S. Warner; Patrick M. Sullivan; Michael P. Vitek; Daniel T. Laskowitz

Apolipoprotein E (apoE) modifies glial activation and the CNS inflammatory response in an isoform-specific manner. Peptides derived from the receptor-binding region of apoE have been demonstrated to maintain the functional activity of the intact protein, and to improve histological and functional deficits after closed head injury. In the current study, APOE2, APOE3, and APOE4 targeted replacement (TR) mice expressing the human apoE protein isoforms (apoE2, apoE3 and apoE4) were used in a clinically relevant model of closed head injury to assess the interaction between the humanized apoE background and the therapeutic apoE mimetic peptide, apoE(133-149). Treatment with the apoE-mimetic peptide reduced microglial activation and early inflammatory events in all of the targeted replacement animals and was associated with histological and functional improvement in the APOE2TR and APOE3TR animals. Similarly, brain beta amyloid protein (Abeta)(1-42) levels were increased as a function of head injury in all of the targeted replacement mice, while treatment with apoE peptide suppressed Abeta(1-42) levels in the APOE2TR and APOE3TR animals. These results suggest a pharmacogenomic interaction between the therapeutic effects of the apoE mimetic peptide and the human apoE protein isoforms. Furthermore, they suggest that administration of apoE-mimetic peptides may serve as a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of acute and chronic neurological disease.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Role of MAP1B in axonal retrograde transport of mitochondria

Eva M. Jimenez-Mateos; Christian González-Billault; Hana N. Dawson; Michael P. Vitek; Jesús Avila

The MAPs (microtubule-associated proteins) MAP1B and tau are well known for binding to microtubules and stabilizing these structures. An additional role for MAPs has emerged recently where they appear to participate in the regulation of transport of cargos on the microtubules found in axons. In this role, tau has been associated with the regulation of anterograde axonal transport. We now report that MAP1B is associated with the regulation of retrograde axonal transport of mitochondria. This finding potentially provides precise control of axonal transport by MAPs at several levels: controlling the anterograde or retrograde direction of transport depending on the type of MAP involved, controlling the speed of transport and controlling the stability of the microtubule tracks upon which transport occurs.

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Jesús Avila

Spanish National Research Council

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