Abstract

The presence of the microtubule-associated protein tau in skin fibroblasts derived from Alzheimer patients and normal controls was investigated using a panel of well-characterized anti-tau antibodies against epitopes spanning the tau protein from the amino to the carboxyl end. The antibodies immunolabeled a fine, fibrillar cytoplasmic network in all skin fibroblasts. Disruption of the microtubule network with colchicine did not affect the immunolabeling of the fibrillar network nor did treatment with cytochalasin B known to disrupt the microfilament network. Immunoelectron microscopy with the anti-tau antibodies revealed colocalization of the label with the 10 nm intermediate filaments. Furthermore, immunoblots found no reactivity against purified vimentin, suggesting that the antibodies recognize an intermediate filament-associated protein. The findings indicate the presence of tau or a protein with considerable homology to tau in fibroblasts associated with intermediate filaments and not microtubules.

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