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Rapid accumulation of endogenous Tau oligomers in a rat model of traumatic brain injury: Possible link between traumatic brain injury and sporadic tauopathies

  • B.E. Hawkinsa(Author)
    ,
  • S. Krishnamurthya(Author)
    ,
  • ,
  • U. Senguptaa(Author)
    ,
  • D.S. Prougha(Author)
    ,
  • G.R. Jacksona(Author)
  • aUniversity of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Revisión por expertos

Métricas de publicación

Métricas

SciVal
FWCI
3.17
SciVal
Número de autores
8
SciVal
Citas
131
SciVal
Percentil de artículo
93
SciVal
Percentil superior
10

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Capturas
197
Citas
131

Resumen

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious problem that affects millions of people in the United States alone. Multiple concussions or even a single moderate to severe TBI can also predispose individuals to develop a pathologically distinct form of tauopathy-related dementia at an early age. No effective treatments are currently available for TBI or TBI-related dementia; moreover, only recently has insight been gained regarding the mechanisms behind their connection. Here, we used antibodies to detect oligomeric and phosphorylated Tau proteins in a non-transgenic rodent model of parasagittal fluid percussion injury. Oligomeric and phosphorylated Tau proteins were detected 4 and 24 h and 2 weeks post-TBI in injured, but not sham control rats. These findings suggest that diagnostic tools and therapeutics that target only toxic forms of Tau may provide earlier detection and safe, more effective treatments for tauopathies associated with repetitive neurotrauma.

Información de Publicación

Tipo de resultado

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Revisión por expertos

Idioma original

English

Páginas desde-hasta (Número de páginas)

Páginas 17042-17050 (9 páginas)

Revista (Volumen, Número de Edición)

Journal of Biological Chemistry (Volumen 288, Número 23)

Hitos de publicación

  • Published - 07/06/2013

Estado de publicación

Published - 07/06/2013

ISSN

0021-9258

ID de publicación externa

  • ORCID: /0000-0003-2511-949X/work/43281172
  • Scopus: 84878750229
  • PubMed: 23632019
  • WOS: 000320378900075