Restoring Tau Homeostasis: A Precision RNA-Based Therapeutic Strategy for Tau-Driven Neurodegeneration
Although the recent approval of anti-amyloid therapies has marked an important milestone for Alzheimer’s disease, their modest clinical benefit underscores the need for alternative disease-modifying strategies. Converging evidence identifies Tau as a central mediator of synaptic dysfunction and neurodegeneration, not only through toxic gain-of-function mechanisms driven by aggregation, but also through loss of its physiological roles in microtubule stabilization and synaptic regulation. Our work using conditional Tau models has demonstrated that both pathological accumulation and Tau depletion contribute to disease progression, revealing that disrupted Tau homeostasis—rather than simple overexpression—is a critical determinant of neuronal vulnerability. Building on these findings, this project aims to develop an innovative RNA-targeting therapeutic strategy to precisely modulate human Tau expression, restoring its functional balance while preventing pathological buildup. By integrating mechanistic insights from our conditional models with translational therapeutic development, we seek to establish a versatile and potentially transformative approach applicable across tauopathies and other Tau-associated brain disorders.
Funding Agency
Funding Agency
Project Reference
Project Members
Ioannis Sotiropoulos
Carlos Campos-Marques
Rita Nóbrega Amaral Martins
Main Project Outcomes
S. Queirós, “Right ventricular segmentation in multi-view cardiac MRI using a unified U-net model”, in E. Puyol Antón et al. (eds) Statistical Atlases and Computational Models of the Heart. Multi-Disease, Multi-View, and Multi-Center Right Ventricular Segmentation in Cardiac MRI Challenge. STACOM 2021. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 13131, pp. 287-295, Springer, Cham, 2022.
“Best Paper Award in the M&Ms-2 Challenge”, by M&Ms2 Challenge organizers and the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention (MICCAI) Society.
Contact us
Phone: +351 253 604 967
Fax: +351 253 604 809
Email: icvs.sec@med.uminho.pt
Address
Life and Health Sciences
Research Institute (ICVS)
School of Medicine,
University of Minho,
Campus de Gualtar
4710-057 Braga
Portugal
Copyright ©2025 ICVS. All Rights Reserved. Developed by TCIT
Copyright ©2025 ICVS. All Rights Reserved. Developed by TCIT
Address
Life and Health Sciences
Research Institute (ICVS)
School of Medicine,
University of Minho,
Campus de Gualtar
4710-057 Braga
Portugal
Copyright ©2025 ICVS. All Rights Reserved
Address
Life and Health Sciences
Research Institute (ICVS)
School of Medicine,
University of Minho,
Campus de Gualtar
4710-057 Braga
Portugal
