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Publication : The potential for beta-structure in the repeat domain of tau protein determines aggregation, synaptic decay, neuronal loss, and coassembly with endogenous Tau in inducible mouse models of tauopathy.

First Author  Mocanu MM Year  2008
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  28
Issue  3 Pages  737-48
PubMed ID  18199773 Mgi Jnum  J:131379
Mgi Id  MGI:3773575 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2824-07.2008
Citation  Mocanu MM, et al. (2008) The potential for beta-structure in the repeat domain of tau protein determines aggregation, synaptic decay, neuronal loss, and coassembly with endogenous Tau in inducible mouse models of tauopathy. J Neurosci 28(3):737-48
abstractText  We describe two new transgenic mouse lines for studying pathological changes of Tau protein related to Alzheimer's disease. They are based on the regulatable expression of the four-repeat domain of human Tau carrying the FTDP17 (frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17) mutation deltaK280 (Tau(RD)/deltaK280), or the deltaK280 plus two proline mutations in the hexapeptide motifs (Tau(RD)/deltaK280/I277P/I308P). The deltaK280 mutation accelerates aggregation ('proaggregation mutant'), whereas the proline mutations inhibit Tau aggregation in vitro and in cell models ('antiaggregation mutant'). The inducible transgene expression was driven by the forebrain-specific CaMKIIalpha (calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIalpha) promoter. The proaggregation mutant leads to Tau aggregates and tangles as early as 2-3 months after gene expression, even at low expression (70% of endogenous mouse Tau). The antiaggregation mutant does not aggregate even after 22 months of gene expression. Both mutants show missorting of Tau in the somatodendritic compartment and hyperphosphorylation in the repeat domain [KXGS motifs, targets of the kinase MARK (microtubule affinity regulating kinase)]. This indicates that these changes are related to Tau expression rather than aggregation. The proaggregation mutant causes astrogliosis, loss of synapses and neurons from 5 months of gene expression onward, arguing that Tau toxicity is related to aggregation. Remarkably, the human proaggregation mutant Tau(RD) coaggregates with mouse Tau, coupled with missorting and hyperphosphorylation at multiple sites. When expression of proaggregation Tau(RD) is switched off, soluble and aggregated exogenous Tau(RD) disappears within 1.5 months. However, tangles of mouse Tau, hyperphosphorylation, and missorting remain, suggesting an extended lifetime of aggregated wild-type Tau once a pathological conformation and aggregation is induced by a proaggregation Tau species.
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