Abstract

BackgroundAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is one of the most popular tauopathies. Neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques are widely recognized as the pathological hallmarks of AD, which are mainly composed of tau and β‐amyloid (Aβ) respectively. Recent failures of drugs targeting Aβ have led scientists to scrutinize the crucial impact of tau in neurodegenerative diseases. Mutated or abnormal phosphorylated tau protein loses affinity with microtubules and assembles into pathological accumulations. The aggregation process closely correlates to two amyloidogenic core of PHF6 (306VQIVYK311) and PHF6* (275VQIINK280) fragments. Moreover, tau accumulations display diverse morphological characteristics in different diseases, which increases the difficulty of providing a unifying neuropathological criterion for early diagnosis.ResultsThis review mainly summarizes atomic‐resolution structures of tau protein in the monomeric, oligomeric and fibrillar states, as well as the promising inhibitors designed to prevent tau aggregation or disaggregate tau accumulations, recently revealed by experimental and computational studies. We also systematically sort tau functions, their relationship with tau structures and the potential pathological processes of tau protein.ConclusionThe current progress on tau structures at atomic level of detail expands our understanding of tau aggregation and related pathology. We discuss the difficulties in determining the source of neurotoxicity and screening effective inhibitors. We hope this review will inspire new clues for designing medicines against tau aggregation and shed light on AD diagnosis and therapies.

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