Abstract
The molecular mechanisms mediating the aggregation and transmission of tau in AD remain unclear. Here, we show that the actin-binding protein cofilin is cleaved by a cysteine protease asparagine endopeptidase (AEP) at N138 in the brains of patients with AD. The AEP-generated cofilin 1-138 fragment interacts with tau and promotes its aggregation. The mixed fibrils consisting of cofilin 1-138 and tau are more pathogenic to cells than pure tau fibrils. Furthermore, overexpression of cofilin 1-138 in the brain facilitates the propagation of pathological tau aggregates and promotes AD-like cognitive impairments in tau P301S mice. However, mice infected with adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) encoding an AEP-uncleavable cofilin mutant show attenuated tau pathology and cognitive impairments compared with mice injected with AAVs encoding wild-type cofilin. Together, these observations support the role of the cofilin 1-138 fragment in the aggregation and transmission of tau pathology during the onset and progression of AD.
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