| 15-Mar-2005 - Neuronal death and
processing of Tau protein in Alzheimer's disease
A cell model study highlights the existence of a self-propagating
loop leading to neuronal degeneration in AD.
In a research report recently published in the Journal
of Alzheimer's Disease (http://www.j-alz.com), published by IOS Press,
a research group from the International School for Advanced Studies (ISASSISSA)
in Trieste (Luisa Fasulo, Gabriele Ugolini e Antonino Cattaneo) showed
that a processed form of tau protein induces neuronal death by apoptosis
(programmed cell death) when expressed in cultured rat hippocampal neurons.
Pathological changes in the microtubule associated protein tau are a major
hallmark of the human dementias collectively defined as tauopathies, including
Alzheimer's disease (AD). In Fronto-Temporal Dementia with Parkinsonism
linked to Chromosome 17 (FTDP-17), several mutations in the tau gene were
identified showing that primary malfunction of tau can lead to neurodegeneration.
Such findings shed new light on the role of post-translational modifications
of tau protein occurring in other tauopathies (such as AD), including
aberrant proteolysis. In AD, tau protein aggregates in intraneuronal deposits
known as "neurofibrillary tangles" (NFT), one of the two hallmarks
of the disease. Tau molecules normally associate to microtubules (major
cytoskeletal structures); in AD, tau proteins dissociate from microtubules
and aggregate into NFTs.
Inappropriate neuronal apoptosis (or neuronal cell death)
is present in AD, as well as in other neurodegenerative diseases. In a
previous study, the authors showed that tau is a substrate for the apoptotic
protease caspase-3 (an enzyme involved in cell death processes) and an
effector of apoptosis itself, in established cell lines. Moreover, the
cleavage of tau by caspase-3 has been recently confirmed to occur "in
vivo" in AD brain as an early event. The study shows the apoptotic
properties of tau fragments in cultured hippocampal neurons, a neuronal
subpopulation precociously affected by AD pathology.
According to the authors, neurodegeneration would be perpetuated
by an "autocatalytic process" in which any modest proapoptotic
stimulus (activating caspase-3) would promote tau cleavage generating
the proapoptotic fragments. The authors also show that this effect is
significantly potentiated by incubation with the amyloid peptide A-beta
25-35, a peptide included in the A-beta fragment (the constituent of extraneuronal
senile plaques, another hallmark of the disease). One of the intersections
between amyloid and neurofibrillary pathological pathways in AD might
rely on caspase-3 cleavage of tau. Intriguingly, the authors find that
one of the tau mutations described in FTDP-17, potentiates the apoptotic
capacity of tau fragments; such finding has no relevance in understanding
the molecular pathogenesis of FTDP-17. However, since the mutation is
located in a region important for the affinity to microtubules, this observation
suggests that this region is likely to be involved in the apoptotic properties
of tau. These results are of general interest, since they provide insights
into the pathogenetic mechanism of AD.
Full Release - http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-03/cwru-nda031505.php
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