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Transgenic Tau Mouse Models Tau[P301S] Mouse Model

Leverage InnoSer’s proprietary Tau[P301S] mouse model with reproducible and aggressive Tau pathology for fast, decision-driven preclinical efficacy studies

Characteristics of the Tau[P301S] mouse model of primary and secondary Tauopathies

The transgenic Tau[P301S] mouse model (also referred to as hTauP301S  or Tg2541 across scientific literature) represents one of the most common research models (Langness et al., 2025) used to perform preclinical  therapeutic testing of candidate drugs targeting primary tauopathies (Pick’s disease, corticobasal degeneration, progressive supranuclear palsy etc.,) as well as secondary tauopathies like Alzheimer’s disease. As described in the original publication (Allen et al., 2002), transgenic Tau[P301S] mice express, under the control of murine thy1 promoter, the 383 amino acid isoforms of human tau harbouring the P301S mutation.  

The P301S mutation is a disease-causing MAPT variant that strongly accelerates tau misfolding, aggregation, in turn leading to development of tau pathology in preclinical mouse models.  

Similar to the pathological phenotype of human tauopathies, the Tau[P301S] mouse model is characterized by aggressive tau pathology including hyperphosphorylation, tau inclusions, neuronal loss and associated motor and cognitive deficits, highlighting its suitability for preclinical efficacy studies.  

Although similar pathological features are observed across other widely established and used transgenic MAPT mouse models of tauopathy such as the PS19 line, important differences in disease pathophysiology, phenotype and study timelines exist between commonly used models and InnoSer’s proprietary Tau[P301S] line, which we’ve explained in our FAQs here. 

Looking for more details about our preclinical services using InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mouse model services?

Early and robust tau hyperphosphorylation is detectable in homozygous TauP301S mice from 3 months of age in the cortex with subsequent involvement of the brainstem, hippocampus and spinal cord

✓ Clasping phenotype onset around 3.5 months of age, reflecting early neurodegenerative changes (Koivisto et al., 2019)

Tau[P301S] mice show early motor dysfunction, with Rotarod deficits measurable from ~4 months and near-complete performance failure by 5 months of age

Mice show cognitive impairment, with deficits in Morris water maze performance and age-dependent hippocampal LTP impairment emerging from ~3.5 months of age

Pronounced neurodegeneration, including neuronal loss accompanied by marked astrocytosis and microgliosis, most prominent in the spinal cord (van Olst et al., 2020)

model overview picture of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome simple illustration of chromosome

Take advantage of InnoSer’s expertise, flexibility, and collaborative approach for your research. We support you in identifying new drug candidates, characterizing their pharmacological properties, and conducting rigorous safety and efficacy studies with state-of-the-art behavioral, bioanalytical, and histopathological readouts.

Compare the pathophysiological disease progression in heterozygous vs. homozygous Tau[P301S] mouse model of primary and secondary tauopathies like Alzheimer’s disease

Gain insights into how tau pathology manifests differently depending on the mouse’s genotype. Our side-by-side comparison highlights key phenotypic differences across pathological, molecular and behavioral domains, revealing earlier disease onset and greater severity in homozygous Tau[P301S] mice. Importantly, this highlights the models’ suitability for performing rapid efficacy screening studies of novel drug interventions targeting tau pathology in a short time window. In contrast, heterozygous Tau[P301S] mice may be preferred when a slower and more progressive tau pathology is required, enabling longer therapeutic intervention windows.  

Model characteristics 
Heterozygous Tau[P301S] Homozygous Tau[P301S]
Tau hyper-phosphorylation   
Tau pathology onset  ~ 9 months of age ~ 3 months of age 
Tau pathology spread Frontal cortex, hippocampus, brainstem and spinal cord Frontal cortex, hippocampus and spinal cord
Typical efficacy study duration 18 weeks 13 weeks
Neuroinflammation
Motoric phenotype   
Onset of motoric phenotype ~ 11 months of age (Rotarod) ~ 4 months of age (Rotarod) 
Associated pathology  Tau pathology and associated neuroinflammation, neuronal loss in the spinal cord Tau pathology, neuronal loss, strong increase in astrocytosis and microgliosis in the spinal cord (van Olst et al., 2020)

 

Example data featuring the Tau[P301S] mouse model of Tauopathies

Your Alzheimer’s Disease Research Starts Here.

Explore our expertly curated comparison of available mouse models to make faster, data-driven decisions. View example study timeline, recommended readouts, and example data featuring validation datasets across the different mouse models.

ALS sample data leaflet download preclinical mouse models of ALS

Key readouts in the Tau[P301S] mouse model of Tauopathies

Biomarker analyses


Test the efficacy of your treatments
  • Tau (total vs phosphorylated Tau) inbrain tissue
  • PlasmaandCSF Neurofilament light chain (NfL) 

Histopathological Analysis


  • Tau phosphorylation (validatedacross multiple antibodies)
  • Astrocytosis(GFAP),microgliosis (CD45), neuronal loss (NeuN)

Behavioural Tests


Test the efficacy of your treatments 
  • Clasping Score
  • Rotarod
  • Open field
  • Grip strength
  • Catwalk
  • Morris Water Maze
  • Phenotyper: Cognition Wall 

      Key publications in InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mouse model

      Original paper: Allen et al., 2002: Abundant tau filaments and nonapoptotic neurodegeneration in transgenic mice expressing human P301S tau protein. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-21-09340.2002 

       

      Therapeutic intervention papers:

      • Chai et al, 2011: Passive immunization with anti-Tau antibodies in two transgenic models: reduction of Tau pathology and delay of disease progression. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.229633 
      • Ozcelik et al. 2013: Rapamycin attenuates the progression of tau pathology in P301S tau transgenic mice. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062459 
      Sex differences in preclinical tauopathy models remain undercharacterized, yet they carry important implications for study design and translational validity. Presented at AD/PD 2026 in Copenhagen, this poster describes a longitudinal phenotyping study of male and female Tau[P301S] mice from 2 to 5.25 months of age.

      Characterizing Sex Differences in the Tau[P301S] Mouse Model of Tauopathies

      Tau[P301S] mice show compound-reversible LTP deficits and progressive tau pathology. A pharmacologically responsive model for tauopathy efficacy studies.

      Proven Compound Susceptible Tau[P301S] Mouse Model for Preclinical Proof of Concept

      The People Behind Your Research

      Sofie Carmans, PhD

      Sofie Carmans, PhD

      Principal Scientist Neurology

      Thomas Vogels, PhD

      Thomas Vogels, PhD

      Principal Scientist Neurology

      Frequently Asked Questions

      Is the Tau[P301S] mouse model the same as Tg2541 or hTauP301S?

      Yes — these names all refer to the same well-characterised transgenic tauopathy model, but they are used interchangeably across different publications and databases.

      The TauP301S mouse model is officially designated as Tg(Thy1-MAPT*P301S)2541Godt, also commonly referred to in the literature as Tg2541, Tau[P301S], or hTau[P301S]. These synonyms describe the same transgenic line developed under the Thy1 promoter, expressing the human MAPT P301S mutation, which is associated with frontotemporal dementia and tau pathology.

      The variation in naming comes from how the model is referenced across different sources:

      • Tg(Thy1-MAPT*P301S)2541Godt → formal genetic nomenclature (MGI database: MGI:3778191)
      • Tg2541 → commonly used shorthand in publications
      • TauP301S / hTauP301S → descriptive names used in neuroscience literature

      Despite these naming differences, they all refer to the same transgenic line expressing mutant human tau under the Thy1 promoter, leading to progressive tau aggregation, neuroinflammation, and neurodegeneration.

      How does InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] line differ from the widely available Tau[P301S] PS19 line?

      Although both InnoSer’s mouse model Tau[P301S] line (referred to as the h.TauP301S model across scientific literature) and the widely available Tau[P301S] PS19 line are single-transgenic tauopathy models expressing the P301S mutant form of human MAPT, important differences exist across model construct, phenotype, and study timelines. 

      At the construct level, PS19 mice express mutant human tau under the prion protein (PrP) promoter, which drives high neuronal expression and results in a rapidly progressing tauopathy. In contrast, InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mice express human tau under the mouse Thy1 promoter, leading to a more controlled and regionally relevant neuronal tau expression profile. 

      With respect to disease development, although tau pathology has been reported at earlier ages in PS19 mice (ca 6 months of age), robust and reproducible tau pathology is most reliably observed at approximately 8–9 months of age. However, an extensive study comparing PS19 and Tau[P301S] phenotypes has highlighted variability in pathology at 8 months of age in the PS19 line, reporting that some mice had 3-fold more tau prions compared to others (Woerman et al., 2017). In turn, this variability may have important implications for study design, choice of endpoints readouts, statistical power, and interpretation of efficacy outcomes.  

      Efficacy studies in PS19 mice are typically initiated around 6 months of age and run until 9 months of age. In contrast to the Tau PS19 line, InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mice rapidly develop tau-associated pathology and can be used for preclinical efficacy studies from approximately 2.5 to 5.5 months of age, enabling faster study initiation due to minimal waiting time for animals to reach the appropriate disease stage. In agreement, the relative frequency of mouse models and treatment start ages are also illustrated in Figure 3 of a recent, comprehensive 20-year tauopathy mouse model review written by Langness and colleagues (2025).  

      Despite known limitations, the PS19 line remains the most widely used Tau[P301S] line to evaluate novel Tau-targeting therapeutics, accounting for approximately 30% of preclinical tauopathy studies, compared with roughly 8% for Tau[P301S], as highlighted in the review of Langness et al., 2025. The continued popularity of the Tau PS19 line across preclinical efficacy studies can be owed to its historical adoption, as well as the model being one of the earliest established models of human tauopathy. Many researchers continue to choose to work with this model to maintain continuity with prior studies and/or internal benchmarks.  

      While InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] line offers less variability and faster study timelines, we also routinely carry out preclinical efficacy studies in the PS19 line when scientific objectives, translational strategy, or legacy data require it.  

      Our team works closely with you to select the most appropriate Tau mouse model based on the specific disease mechanisms, endpoints, and patient populations of interest. 

      Reach out to our expert team to inquire which Tau mouse model is the most suitable for your research.  

      How does the Tau[P301S] model compare to the Tau[P301L] mouse model?

      Both Tau[P301S] (originally described by Allen et al., 2002) and Tau[P301L] (originally described by Terwell et al., 2005) mouse models feature pathogenic mutations in the human MAPT gene, which are associated with various forms of familial frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). However, they differ markedly in the development of tau disease pathophysiology and thus, experimental utility.  

      Following InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] in-depth characterization studies, we detect early and robust tau-associated pathology, including pronounced tau hyperphosphorylation, accumulation of insoluble tau species, starting already at 3 months of age, insoluble pTau at 4.5 months of age, and progressing rapidly until 6 months of age, when robust tau pathology is present. In this model, tau pathology is widespread across the brain, including the cortex, hippocampus, and brainstem, and is accompanied by associated neuroinflammation and neuronal loss in the spinal cord (van Olst et al., 2020). Robust motor deficits confirmed by InnoSer’s team at 5 months of age, and cognitive deficits in Morris water maze performance and age-dependent hippocampal LTP impairment emerging from ~3.5 months of age. This rapid and consistent phenotype enables you to perform reproducible preclinical efficacy and target-engagement studies with short in vivo study timelines.  

      In contrast, in the Tau[P301L] model evaluated by InnoSer, consistent with scientific literature, tau pathology develops more gradually, with more variable and later onset of neurofibrillary tangle–like pathology occurring around 7-8 months of age. In this model, tau pathology is limited to the brain stem (and spinal cord) with a decreasing extent in the midbrain and cerebral cortex. Although Tau[P301L] mice show progressive, age-dependent deficits in motor function (beam walk, clasping phenotype), these are present starting from 7 months of age, with robust, detectable deficits occurring at 9 months of age.   

      This slower disease progression makes the Tau[P301L] model more suitable for longitudinal studies focused on disease evolution, chronic treatment paradigms, and mechanisms underlying progressive tau aggregation.  

      Taken together, InnoSer generally recommends running efficacy studies in Tau[P301S] model due to its rapid, reproducible tau pathology and behavioral phenotype, helping you obtain quick preclinical decisions. Tau[P301L] model may be better suited for studies requiring extended observation of tauopathy progression. 

      Reach out to InnoSer’s expert team to discuss which Tau mouse model is the most suitable for your research.  

      What is the relevance of assessing sarkosyl-insoluble Tau fractions?

      Accumulation of Tau aggregates is a unifying feature of all tauopathies; therefore, biochemical quantification of tau fractions (soluble and insoluble) serves as a crucial endpoint to assess disease stage as well as therapeutic efficacy in tau mouse models. This approach has been widely used to quantify tau post-translational modifications and aggregation propensity across fundamental and preclinical tauopathy research using patient brain extracts and/or animal models.  

      Sarkosyl is a mild ionic detergent that solubilizes most natively folded and non-aggregated cellular proteins. When tau becomes hyperphosphorylated, misfolded, or aggregated, it shifts from a soluble to a sarkosyl-insoluble fraction, reflecting disease-relevant biochemical changes.  

      Following the separation of sarkosyl-soluble and insoluble tau aggregates from specific mouse brain extracts (i.e., brainstem), biochemical protein assays such as western blot can be performed to assess tau phosphorylation across different tau species (i.e., using detection antibodies against AT8 and/or AT100).  

      At InnoSer, we routinely detect and quantify both sarkosyl-soluble and sarkosyl-insoluble Tau fractions, enabling sensitive assessment of disease progression as well as therapeutic effects on Tau aggregation, clearance, and solubility shifts.  

      Does the Tau[P301S] mouse model show cognitive deficits?

      Although young (~3.5 months old) homozygous Tau[P301S] mice do show early signs of cognitive deficits in the Morris water maze test and Cogntion Wall, in InnoSer’s experience, the mice develop aggressive early-onset motor impairments that interfere with reliable assessment of cognition using standard behavioral tests at older ages.  

      As a result, classical cognitive testing becomes technically challenging as motor deficits precede and/or overlap the emergence of cognitive dysfunction in Tau[P301S] mice. 

      As an alternative in the Tau[P301S] model, synaptic and memory-related deficits can be evaluated using electrophysiological readouts using ex vivo brain slices, such as hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), which provide sensitive and motor-independent measures of synaptic plasticity that can serve as a proxy measure for memory deficits in Tau[P301S] mice. Indeed, InnoSer’s internal validation datasets show that this mouse model shows significant deficits compared to WT littermates in synaptic plasticity in the CA1 region using hippocampal ex vivo brain slices obtained from 3-month-old mice.  

      Reach out to InnoSer’s expert team to inquire about performing LTP ex vivo experiments using hippocampal brain slices from the Tau[P301S] mouse model.

      What therapeutics can be investigated in the Tau[P301S] mouse model?

      Generally speaking, InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mouse model is suitable to evaluate a wide spectrum of Tau-targeting therapeutics currently in the discovery and preclinical stages (for review of all therapeutic Tau approaches, we refer you to Langness et al., 2025). 

      These include: active vaccine immunization targeting tau protein, compounds (small molecules, ASOs) targeting primary disease-associated mechanisms, including microtubule stabilization, tau aggregation, tau isoform imbalance, tau propagation, tau reduction.  

      Compounds (small molecules, ASOs) targeting secondary disease-associated mechanisms such as energy metabolism, oxidative stress, proteostasis network, cellular senescence, immune response, and lipid metabolism – to name a few – can be evaluated in this model as well.  

      Reach out to InnoSer’s team to confirm whether the Tau[P301S] mouse model is the most suitable for your research.

      Has disease modification been demonstrated in the Tau[P301S] mouse model?

      Yes, published research has shown that disease modification has been demonstrated in the Tau[P301S] mouse model in preclinical studies targeting key tau-driven pathological mechanisms.  

      Notably, treatment with anti-Tau antibodies has been shown to reduce Tau pathology and slow disease progression (Chai et al., 2011). In addition, autophagy-enhancing approaches, such as the mTOR inhibitor rapamycin, have demonstrated efficacy by reducing pathological Tau accumulation and improving disease-associated phenotypes (Ozcelik et al., 2013). 

      Together, these findings support the translational relevance of the Tau[P301S] mouse model for evaluating disease-modifying therapies aimed at Tau aggregation, clearance, and downstream neurodegenerative processes. 

      Is InnoSer’s Tau[P301S] mouse model readily available for preclinical efficacy studies?

      Yes, as a preclinical neurodegeneration CRO, InnoSer maintains access to established breeding cohorts of the Tau[P301S] mouse model, enabling rapid study initiation depending on the required animal age and genotype.  

      Our proactive colony planning ensures that your preclinical efficacy studies can be launched with minimal lead time.  

      Contact our team to confirm current availability and obtain study timelines for your Tau-targeting therapeutic still today.

      InnoSer’s Available Alzheimer’s Disease Model Types

      Amyloid (APP/ AB) Transgenic Mouse Models

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      Transgenic Tau Mouse Models

      InnoSer offers unique research services with several different transgenic tau models, which recapitulate the Tau neurofibrillary tangle pathology of AD.

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      Tau Seeding & Spreading Mouse Models

      InnoSer uses an AD brain extract injection model, providing unique preclinical services with a translational model of Tau pathology seeding and spreading.

      In Vitro Neurology Assays

      Screen your lead candidate compounds using InnoSer’s in vitro neurology assays to progress to preclinical in vivo studies with confidence

      InnoSer’s Available Alzheimer’s Disease Mouse Models

      Transgenic PS19 Mouse Model

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      Leverage one of the most widely used mouse models in preclinical research to evaluate the efficacy of your compound targeting tau pathology

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      Tau P301S mouse model

      Tau[P301S] Mouse Model

      Leverage InnoSer’s proprietary Tau[P301S] mouse model with reproducible and aggressive Tau pathology for fast, decision-driven preclinical efficacy studies

      APP[V717I] x PS1[A246E] mouse model

      APP[V717I] x PS1[A246E] mouse model

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      Tau[P301L] Mouse Model

      Tau[P301L] Mouse Model

      Leverage InnoSer’s Tau[P301L] mouse model with progressive, well-characterized Tau pathology for mechanism-driven preclinical efficacy studies

      Transgenic APP x PS1 ARTE10 mouse model

      Transgenic APP x PS1 ARTE10 mouse model

      Advance your amyloid-lowering therapeutic program by leveraging the widespread amyloid-beta pathology of the ARTE10 mouse model for robust preclinical efficacy studies

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      APP[V717I] x Tau[P301S] mouse model

      Evaluate multi-target therapeutics in InnoSer’s combined APPxTau  disease model

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      AAALAC Accreditation

      InnoSer has earned the AAALAC accreditation, demonstrating our commitment to responsible animal care and use. AAALAC International is a nonprofit organization that promotes the humane treatment of animals in science through voluntary accreditation and assessment programs. InnoSer’s facilities in the Netherlands and Belgium have been AAALAC-accredited since 2016 and 2020, respectively. Read more about the AAALAC accreditation programme here.

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      Animal Welfare

      The 3Rs impact everything from policy and regulatory change to the development and uptake of new technologies and approaches. This is why InnoSer has ongoing commitment and monitoring of these processes. The steps we practice maximize our ability to replace, reduce and refine animal involvement and facilitate our commitment to these principles when it comes to research and drug development.