From Analysis:
Investigate prion-like spreading of tau pathology through connected brain regions
Investigate prion-like spreading of tau pathology through connected brain regions
These hypotheses emerged from the same multi-agent debate that produced this hypothesis.
Internalized tau seeds persist in endosomal compartments that acidify via V-ATPase. Endosomal maturation impairment allows tau escape into cytosol via 'back-fusion' or incomplete degradation. TFEB overexpression enhances lysosomal biogenesis and promotes complete tau degradation within lysosomes. However, the autophagy paradox (autophagosomes concentrate substrates and hydrolases, potentially accelerating fibrillization) and lysosomal sieve effect (mature fibrils exceed cathepsin size limits) are unresolved biochemical constraints.
No AI visual card yet
AlphaFold predicted structure available for O14964
View AlphaFold StructureTitle: Blocking exosomal tau uptake at neuronal LRP1 receptors disrupts interneuronal propagation
Mechanism: Extracellular tau seeds are packaged into exosomes and released from donor neurons. Recipient neurons internalize these exosomes via LRP1 (low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1) receptor-mediated endocytosis. Blocking LRP1 prevents tau seed entry and subsequent templated misfold
Receptor Specificity Problem: LRP1 is a multiligand receptor recognizing >40 distinct ligands including apoE, α2-macroglobulin, and lactoferrin. The mechanistic claim that blocking LRP1 specifically prevents tau uptake lacks pharmacological specificity. The cited PMIDs (28726224, 27639496, 27016009) demonstrate correlation but not causal exclusivity—LRP1 may facilitate general endocytic activity rather than tau-specific uptake.
Compartmental Specificity: The mechanism
After integrating the theorist's mechanistic proposals with the skeptic's counterarguments, the seven hypotheses span a wide confidence range (0.39–0.58 in revised estimates). The clinical development feasibility of this therapeutic space depends critically on addressing a fundamental tension: the most mechanistically plausible targets (CDK5, NMDAR) carry the greatest safety liabilities, while the safest targets (HSPG competition, glymphatic enhancement) face the steepest translational barriers. Below I pr
No clinical trials data available
Molecular pathway showing key causal relationships underlying this hypothesis
graph TD
sess_SDA_2026_04_04_gap_2["sess_SDA-2026-04-04-gap-20260404-052358_task_9aae8fc5"] -->|produced| SDA_2026_04_04_gap_202604["SDA-2026-04-04-gap-20260404-052358"]
CDK5["CDK5"] -->|phosphorylates| tau["tau"]
CDK5_hyperactivation["CDK5 hyperactivation"] -->|causes| tau_pathology_in_AD["tau pathology in AD"]
CDK5_1["CDK5"] -->|causes| synaptic_dysfunction["synaptic dysfunction"]
CDK5_inhibition["CDK5 inhibition"] -.->|inhibits| tau_release["tau release"]
CDK5_p25["CDK5-p25"] -->|causes| pathological_tau_release["pathological tau release"]
CX3CR1["CX3CR1"] -->|regulates| microglial_phagocytosis["microglial phagocytosis"]
CX3CR1_deficiency["CX3CR1 deficiency"] -->|impairs| tau_clearance["tau clearance"]
CX3CR1_agonism["CX3CR1 agonism"] -.->|reduces| tau_seeds["tau seeds"]
CX3CR1_2["CX3CR1"] -->|regulates| tau_spreading["tau spreading"]
CX3CR1__microglia["CX3CR1+ microglia"] -->|migrates to| tau_deposits["tau deposits"]
TREM2["TREM2"] -->|synergizes with| CX3CR1_3["CX3CR1"]
style sess_SDA_2026_04_04_gap_2 fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style SDA_2026_04_04_gap_202604 fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CDK5 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CDK5_hyperactivation fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_pathology_in_AD fill:#ef5350,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CDK5_1 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
style synaptic_dysfunction fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CDK5_inhibition fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_release fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CDK5_p25 fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style pathological_tau_release fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
style microglial_phagocytosis fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1_deficiency fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_clearance fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1_agonism fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_seeds fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1_2 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_spreading fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1__microglia fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style tau_deposits fill:#4fc3f7,stroke:#333,color:#000
style TREM2 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
style CX3CR1_3 fill:#ce93d8,stroke:#333,color:#000
neurodegeneration | 2026-04-04 | archived
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!