Neuronal alkaline phosphatase promotes the spread of Tau-induced pathology, and its blockade prevents neurodegeneration and memory loss
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2026
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Elsevier
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Soria-Tobar, L., Ouro-Corredera, D., Roman-Valero, L., Hernández, F., Millán, J. L., Álvarez-Castelao, B., Sebastián-Serrano, Á., Aivar, P., & Díaz-Hernández, M. (2026). Neuronal alkaline phosphatase promotes the spread of Tau-induced pathology, and its blockade prevents neurodegeneration and memory loss. Neurotherapeutics : the journal of the American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics, 23(2), e00869. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neurot.2026.e00869
Abstract
Tauopathies, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), are neurodegenerative disorders marked by abnormal intraneuronal aggregates of phosphorylated Tau protein. Unfortunately, no effective treatment is currently available. Since extracellular Tau (eTau) is essential for the spread of cerebral tauopathy, immunotherapy approaches using specific antibodies against Tau have been investigated. However, these strategies have shown limited applicability and benefit. Because previous in vitro studies reported that dephosphorylation of eTau by tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) enhances its neurotoxicity, here we evaluate how neuronal TNAP contributes to Tau-induced neurotoxicity in vivo. To address this, we generated new transgenic mouse lines using Cre-lox technology to i) specifically delete TNAP in excitatory neurons of P301S mice, a well-characterized tauopathy model, or ii) induce neuronal TNAP overexpression in WT mice. Moreover, we compare the in vivo spreading capacity of phospho-eTau and dephospho-eTau-induced neurotoxicity. Our findings show that neuronal TNAP deletion in P301S mice reduces i) neuronal and synaptic loss, ii) the number of neurons with neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), iii) reactive astrogliosis and microgliosis, and iv) brain calcifications; collectively, these changes lead to v) improved memory function in these mice. Conversely, overexpression of neuronal TNAP in WT mice alone is sufficient to cause i) loss of thalamic neurons and synaptic contacts, ii) formation of intracellular NFTs, iii) reactive gliosis, iv) brain calcifications, and v) memory impairment. These results demonstrate that neuronal TNAP promotes Tau-induced neurotoxicity spreading by facilitating eTau dephosphorylation, which confirms this ectoenzyme as a promising therapeutic target for tauopathies
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Author contributions
L.S-T processed the transgenic mice, generated and analyzed the samples, and contributed to the interpretation of the data; D.O–C processed the transgenic mice, generated and analyzed the samples, and participated in experimental design, L.R bred and processed the transgenic mice, generated and analyzed the samples; A.S–S generated and analyzed the samples, participated in experimental design, contributed to the interpretation of the data and revised the manuscript; P.A. generated and analyzed the samples, participated in experimental design, contributed to the interpretation of the data, and revised the manuscript; B.A-C contributed to the interpretation of the result and revised the manuscript; F.H. participated in experimental design, contributed to the interpretation of the data and revised the manuscript. J.L.M. participated in experimental design, contributed the floxed Alpl and the HprtALPL mice, and revised the manuscript. M.D-H participated in mouse breeding and processing, generated and analyzed the samples, participated in the experimental design, contributed to the interpretation of the results, wrote the manuscript, and provided financial support for the work. All authors read and approved the final manuscript













