Abstract

The microtubule-associated protein tau aggregates intracellularly by unknown mechanisms in Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies. A contributing factor may be a failure to break down free cytosolic tau, thus creating a surplus for aggregation, although the proteases that degrade tau in brain remain unknown. To address this issue, we prepared cytosolic fractions from five normal human brains and from perfused rat brains and incubated them with or without protease inhibitors. D-Phenylalanyl-L-prolylarginyl chloromethyl ketone, a thrombin-specific inhibitor, prevented tau breakdown in these fractions, suggesting that thrombin is a brain protease that processes tau. We next exposed human recombinant tau to purified human thrombin and analyzed the fragments by N-terminal sequencing. We found that thrombin proteolyzed tau at multiple arginine and lysine sites. These include Arg(155)-Gly(156), Arg(209)-Ser(210), Arg(230)-Thr(231), Lys(257)-Ser(258), and Lys(340)-Ser(341) (numbering according to the longest human tau isoform). Temporally, the initial cleavage occurred at the Arg(155)-Gly(156) bond. Proteolysis of the resultant C-terminal tau fragment then proceeded bidirectionally. When tau was phosphorylated by glycogen synthase kinase-3beta, most of these proteolytic processes were inhibited, except for the first cleavage at the Arg(155)-Gly(156) bond. Furthermore, paired helical filament tau prepared from Alzheimer's disease brain was more resistant to thrombin proteolysis than following dephosphorylation by alkaline phosphatase. The results suggest a possible role for thrombin in proteolysis of tau under physiological and/or pathological conditions in human brains. They are consistent with the hypothesis that phosphorylation of tau inhibits proteolysis by thrombin or other endogenous proteases, leading to aggregation of tau into insoluble fibrils.

Highlights

  • Helical filaments (PHFs)1 of Alzheimer’s disease brains

  • We examined tau breakdown in cytosolic fractions extracted from five normal human brains incubated at 37 °C with or without various kinds of protease inhibitors

  • phenylalanyl-L-prolylarginyl chloromethyl ketone (PPACK) inhibited tau breakdown in the same fraction prepared from perfused rat brains, indicating that thrombin in sufficient quantity for degrading tau is present in brain cells

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Effect of Protease Inhibitors on the Breakdown of Endogenous Tau in Soluble Human Brain Extracts—Five subjects without any neurological symptoms were employed in this study. The homogenate was aliquoted into multiple ultracentrifugation tubes, and a different protease inhibitor was added to each tube. The protease inhibitors used were as follows: protease inhibitor cocktail, Pefabloc SC (4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride), aprotinin, chymostatin, trypsin inhibitor from chicken egg white, leupeptin, antipain dihydrochloride, E-64, calpain inhibitors I and II, pepstatin, bestatin, and.

Goat pAba
RESULTS
Potato carboxypeptidase inhibitor
DISCUSSION
Residues kDa
Full Text
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