Abstract

Brain tau protein is phosphorylated in vitro by cdc2 and MAP2 kinases, obtained through immunoaffinity purification from rat brain extracts. The phosphorylation sites are located on the tau molecule both upstream and downstream of the tubulin-binding motifs. A synthetic peptide comprising residues 194–213 of the tau sequence, which contains the epitope recognized by the monoclonal antibody tau-1, is also efficiently phosphorylated in vitro by cdc2 and MAP2 kinases. Phosphorylation of this peptide markedly reduces its interaction with the antibody tau-1, as it has been described for tau protein in Alzheimer's disease. Both cdc2 and MAP2 kinases are present in brain extracts obtained from Alzheimer's disease patients. Interestingly, the level of cdc2 kinase may be increased in patient brains as compared with non-demented controls. These results suggest a role for cdc2 and MAP2 kinases in phosphorylating tau protein at the tau-1 epitope in Alzheimer's disease.

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