Abstract

Tau is a soluble, microtubule-associated protein known to aberrantly form amyloid-positive aggregates. This pathology is characteristic for more than 15 neuropathies, the most common of which is Alzheimer’s disease. Finding therapeutics to reverse or remove this non-native tau state is of great interest; however, at this time only one drug is entering phase III clinical trials for treating tauopathies. Generally, tau manipulation by therapeutics can either directly or indirectly alter tau aggregation and stability. Drugs that bind and change the conformation of tau itself are largely classified as aggregation inhibitors, while drugs that alter the activity of a tau-effector protein fall into several categories, such as kinase inhibitors, microtubule stabilizers, or chaperone modulators. Chaperone inhibitors that have proven effective in tau models include heat shock protein 90 inhibitors, heat shock protein 70 inhibitors and activators, as well as inducers of heat shock proteins. While many of these compounds can alter tau levels and/or aggregation states, it is possible that combining these approaches may produce the most optimal outcome. However, because many of these compounds have multiple off-target effects or poor blood–brain barrier permeability, the development of this synergistic therapeutic strategy presents significant challenges. This review will summarize many of the drugs that have been identified to alter tau biology, with special focus on therapeutics that prevent tau aggregation and regulate chaperone-mediated clearance of tau.

Highlights

  • Tau is a soluble, microtubule-associated protein known to aberrantly form amyloid-positive aggregates

  • Therapeutic targeting of tau triage Tauopathies, a class of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementia, and progressive supranuclear palsy, are characterized by the pathological aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau tangles in the human brain [1]

  • Studies have shown that several molecular chaperone families, known as heat shock proteins (Hsps), are involved with preventing tau aggregation [2,3] or assisting in tau degradation [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Microtubule-associated protein known to aberrantly form amyloid-positive aggregates. Studies have shown that several molecular chaperone families, known as heat shock proteins (Hsps), are involved with preventing tau aggregation [2,3] or assisting in tau degradation [4]. Hsp70 inhibitors have shown promise as anti-tau therapeutics [19], and they do not cause a heat shock induction.

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