Abstract

In Alzheimer disease (AD) brain, the level of I (1)(PP2A), a 249-amino acid long endogenous inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), is increased, the activity of the phosphatase is decreased, and the microtubule-associated protein Tau is abnormally hyperphosphorylated. However, little is known about the detailed regulatory mechanism by which PP2A activity is inhibited by I (1)(PP2A) and the consequent events in mammalian cells. In this study, we found that both I (1)(PP2A) and its N-terminal half I (1)(PP2A(1-120)), but neither I (1)(PP2A(1-163)) nor I (1)(PP2A(164-249)), inhibited PP2A activity in vitro, suggesting an autoinhibition by amino acid residues 121-163 and its neutralization by the C-terminal region. Furthermore, transfection of NIH3T3 cells produced a dose-dependent inhibition of PP2A activity by I (1)(PP2A)(1). I (PP2A) and PP2A were found to colocalize in PC12 cells. I (1)(PP2A) could only interact with the catalytic subunit of PP2A (PP2Ac) and had no interaction with the regulatory subunits of PP2A (PP2A-A or PP2A-B) using a glutathione S-transferase-pulldown assay. The interaction was further confirmed by coimmunoprecipitation of I (1)(PP2A) and PP2Ac from lysates of transiently transfected NIH3T3 cells. The N-terminal isotype specific region of I (1)(PP2A) was required for its association with PP2Ac as well as PP2A inhibition. In addition, the phosphorylation of Tau was significantly increased in PC12/Tau441 cells transiently transfected with full-length I (1)(PP2A) and with PP2Ac-interacting I (1)(PP2A) deletion mutant 1-120 (I (1)(PP2A)DeltaC2). Double immunofluorescence staining showed that I (1)(PP2A) and I (1)(PP2A)DeltaC2 increased Tau phosphorylation and impaired the microtubule network and neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells treated with nerve growth factor.

Highlights

  • In Alzheimer disease (AD) brain, the axonal microtubule associated protein (MAP) Tau is heavily phosphorylated due in part to decreased Tau phosphatase activity compared with the control brain [6]

  • We investigated whether I1PP2A decreased PP2A activity directly or through inhibiting PP2A expression level in NIH3T3 cells transiently transfected with different amounts of FLAG-tagged I1PP2A

  • We found that in FLAG-tagged I1PP2A-transfected cells, the expression level of I1PP2A as well as the inhibition of PP2A activity increased in a dose-dependent manner, whereas, PP2A expression level was not significantly altered (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

In AD brain, the axonal microtubule associated protein (MAP) Tau is heavily phosphorylated due in part to decreased Tau phosphatase activity compared with the control brain [6]. The present study shows that the PP2A activity is dose-dependently inhibited by I1PP2A and that this decrease is not due to reduced PP2A expression level in NIH3T3 cells.

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