GSK‐3 inhibition by adenoviral FRAT1 overexpression is neuroprotective and induces Tau dephosphorylation and β‐catenin stabilisation without elevation of glycogen synthase activity

Abstract
Glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) has previously been shown to play an important role in the regulation of apoptosis. However, the nature of GSK-3 effector pathways that are relevant to neuroprotection remains poorly defined. Here, we have compared neuroprotection resulting from modulation of GSK-3 activity in PC12 cells using either selective small molecule ATP-competitive GSK-3 inhibitors (SB-216763 and SB-415286), or adenovirus overexpressing requently earranged in dvanced -cell lymphomas 1 (FRAT1), a protein proposed as a negative regulator of GSK-3 activity towards Axin and β-catenin. Our data demonstrate that cellular overexpression of FRAT1 is sufficient to confer neuroprotection and correlates with inhibition of GSK-3 activity towards Tau and β-catenin, but not modulation of glycogen synthase (GS) activity. By comparison, treatment with SB-216763 and SB-415286 proved more potent in terms of neuroprotection, and correlated with inhibition of GSK-3 activity towards GS in addition to Tau and β-catenin.