Abstract

Abnormal intracellular accumulation of aggregated tau is a hallmark feature of Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies. Pathological tau can undergo a range of post-translational modifications (PTMs) that are implicated as triggers of disease pathology. Recent studies now indicate that tau acetylation, in particular, controls both microtubule binding and tau aggregation, thereby acting as a central regulator of tau's biochemical properties and providing avenues to exploit for potential therapies. Here, using cell-based assays and tau transgenic mice harboring an acetylation-mimic mutation at residue Lys-280 (K280Q), we evaluated whether this substitution modifies the neurodegenerative disease pathology associated with the aggregate-prone tau P301S variant. Strikingly, the addition of a K280Q-substituted variant altered P301S-mediated tau conformation and reduced tau hyperphosphorylation. We further evaluated neurodegeneration markers in K280Q acetylation-mimic mice and observed reduced neuroinflammation as well as restored levels of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors and post-synaptic markers compared with the parental mice. Thus, substituting a single lysine residue in the context of a P301S disease-linked mutation produces a unique tau species that abrogates some of the cardinal features of tauopathy. The findings of our study indicate that a complex tau PTM code likely regulates tau pathogenesis, highlighting the potential utility of manipulating and detoxifying tau strains through site-specific tau-targeting approaches.

Highlights

  • Abnormal intracellular accumulation of aggregated tau is a hallmark feature of Alzheimer’s disease and other tauopathies

  • Using cell-based assays and tau transgenic mice harboring an acetylation-mimic mutation at residue Lys-280 (K280Q), we evaluated whether this substitution modifies the neurodegenerative disease pathology associated with the aggregate-prone tau P301S variant

  • Either global tau acetylation mediated by acetyltransferase activity or an acetylation-mimic mutation targeting a single residue in the 2nd repeat (Lys-280) is capable of altering

Read more

Summary

ARTICLE cro

A unique tau conformation generated by an acetylationmimic substitution modulates P301S-dependent tau pathology and hyperphosphorylation. Using cell-based assays and tau transgenic mice harboring an acetylation-mimic mutation at residue Lys-280 (K280Q), we evaluated whether this substitution modifies the neurodegenerative disease pathology associated with the aggregate-prone tau P301S variant. Accumulation of acetylated tau has consistently been observed in tau lesions from AD patients as well as a range of other human tauopathies, including familial frontotemporal dementia, corticobasal degeneration, and progressive supranuclear palsy [1, 13,14,15]. These correlative studies link acetylated tau to tauopathies, the implications of acetylation required additional in vivo studies. Our study suggests that a comprehensive understanding of tau PTMs could be exploited for site-specific targeting approaches to potentially slow taumediated neurodegeneration

Results
Discussion
Plasmids and cell culture
Biochemical extraction of mouse brain
Immunoblotting and biochemical analysis
IHC analysis
Statistical analyses
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call