Abstract

The microtubule-associated protein tau is more highly phosphorylated at certain residues in developing brain and in Alzheimer's disease paired helical filaments than in adult brain. We examined the regulation of tau phosphorylation at some of these sites in rat brain using the phosphorylation state-dependent anti-tau antibodies AT8, Tau1, and PHF1. The AT8 and PHF1 antibodies bind to phosphorylated tau, while Tau1 binds to unphosphorylated tau. Levels of tau reactive for AT8 were high only during the first postnatal week, with levels in adult declining to approximately 5% of the levels in neonates. In neonatal forebrain slices, tau became rapidly dephosphorylated at the AT8 and Tau1 sites during incubation at 34 degrees C, but was incompletely dephosphorylated at the PHF1 site. Dephosphorylation at AT8 sites, but not at Tau1 or PHF1 sites, was completely inhibited by 1 microM okadaic acid. Hence the regulation of tau phosphorylation by okadaic acid-sensitive phosphatase(s) was site-specific. Addition of 1 microM okadaic acid after dephosphorylation at the AT8 locus yielded a partial recovery of AT8 immunoreactivity, and incubation with basic fibroblast growth factor increased phosphorylation at the AT8 site in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that endogenously active and basic fibroblast growth factor stimulated tau kinases directed toward an Alzheimer's disease-related site were present in the slices. In adult brain slices, the small pool of AT8-reactive tau was remarkably insensitive to dephosphorylation during incubation, and okadaic acid treatment induced only small increases in AT8 immunoreactivity. These results suggest that tau phosphorylation in adult brain is less dynamic than in neonatal brain. These findings indicate that neonatal tau is not only phosphorylated more highly than adult tau, but also more dynamically regulated by protein phosphatases and protein kinases than adult tau. The inability of okadaic acid to induce large increases in tau phosphorylation in adult rat brain slices suggests that a loss of protein phosphatase activity alone would not be sufficient to produce the hyperphosphorylation observed in Alzheimer's disease paired helical filaments. Stimulation of kinase activity by basic fibroblast growth factor is likely to modulate tau function during development, and may contribute to the genesis of hyperphosphorylated tau in Alzheimer's disease.

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