| Literature DB >> 26395440 |
Yoann Sottejeau1,2,3, Alexis Bretteville1,2,3, François-Xavier Cantrelle3,4,5, Nicolas Malmanche1,2,3, Florie Demiaute1,2,3, Tiago Mendes1,2,3, Charlotte Delay1,2,3, Harmony Alves Dos Alves1,2,3, Amandine Flaig1,2,3, Peter Davies6,7, Pierre Dourlen1,2,3, Bart Dermaut1,2,3,8, Jocelyn Laporte9, Philippe Amouyel1,2,3, Guy Lippens3,4,5, Julien Chapuis1,2,3, Isabelle Landrieu10,11,12, Jean-Charles Lambert13,14,15.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The application of high-throughput genomic approaches has revealed 24 novel risk loci for Alzheimer's disease (AD). We recently reported that the bridging integrator 1 (BIN1) risk gene is linked to Tau pathology.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26395440 PMCID: PMC4580349 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-015-0237-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1The BIN1-Tau interaction is mediated by the Tau PRD and the BIN1 SH3 domain. a. A schematic linear representation of 2N4R Tau (Tau FL) and BIN1 isoform1 (BIN1 FL) sequences and their respective domains (as used in GST pull-down assays). MBD: microtubule-binding domain; PRD: proline-rich domain; Bar: BIN1-amphiphysin-Rvs167; CLAP: clathrin and AP-2 binding; MycBD: Myc-binding domain; SH3: Src homology 3. b. GST pull-down assays performed with various Tau constructs corresponding to specific Tau subdomains (Lane 2: GST-Tau FL 2N4R; lane3: GST-Tau/Nter[1–152]; lane 4: GST-Tau/PRD[153–244]; lane 5: GST-Tau/MBD[244–441]) incubated with homogenates from BIN1-overexpressing HEK293 cells (n = 3). Upper panel: A representative immunoblot of BIN1 pull-down, revealed with a 99D anti-BIN1 antibody. c. GST pull-down assays performed either with full length BIN1 (Lane 2: GST-BIN1 FL) or the BIN1 SH3 domain (lane 3: GST-BIN1/SH3) incubated with homogenates from Tau FL-overexpressing HEK293 cells (n = 3). Upper panel: A representative immunoblot of Tau pull-down, revealed with a Dako anti-Tau antibody. d. GST pull-down assays performed with GST-Tau FL (lanes 3 and 4) or GST-Tau/PRD (lanes 5 and 6) incubated with homogenates from HEK293 cells overexpressing either BIN1 FL (lanes 3 and 5) or a BIN1 construct lacking the SH3 domain (BIN1/ΔSH3, lanes 4 and 6) (n = 3). Upper panel: A representative immunoblot of BIN1 pull-down, revealed with a 99D anti-BIN1 antibody. Lower panels (B, C, D): the corresponding Coomassie blue gels, used as loading controls for the pull-down assays. e. Two-dimensional (2D) [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 100 μM 15N 2N4R Tau, either free in solution (gray) or with a 1.6 molar amount of GST-BIN1/SH3 (blue, superimposed): Overlaid details of the full spectra presented in Additional file 3. f. Combined 1H, 15N CS perturbations (δ CS) in ppm, as defined in the Methods, in [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 15N 2N4R Tau with a 1.6 molar ratio of GST-BIN1/SH3 versus the molecule free in solution for every resonance along the sequence. The dashed box indicates the position of the Tau-F5 fragment within the Tau FL sequence. g. 2D [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 100 μM 15N Tau-F5 [165–245] free in solution (gray) or with a 1.2 molar amount of GST-BIN1/SH3 (red, superimposed): Overlaid details of full spectra presented in Additional file 4. h. Combined 1H, 15N CS perturbations (δ CS) in ppm, as defined in the Methods, in [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 15N Tau-F5 [165–245] with a 1.6 molar ratio of GST-BIN1/SH3, versus the free molecule in solution and for every resonance along the sequence. i. The a minima SH3 binding sequence in Tau. Proline residues are shown in bold, residues with resonance broadenings upon interaction are shown in red and residues with CS deviation when comparing free and bound states are shown in blue. The underlined amino acid residues fit the consensus sequence for SH3 binding (PxxPx+, where x is any residue and + is a positively charged residue) [30]
Fig. 2Tau phosphorylation precludes the BIN1-Tau interaction in vitro. a. Tau-F5 fragment phosphorylation analysis after in vitro phosphorylation by CDK2/CycA3 kinase. Representative immunoblots using various antibodies against phosphorylation epitopes in Tau. The total amount of Tau-F5 was revealed by the phosphorylation-independent antibody Tau5. The significant shift in molecular weight observed in CDK2/CycA3-treated samples indicates Tau hyperphosphorylation. In contrast to other antibodies, the Tau-1 antibody binds to various non-phosphorylated Tau sites; the signal thus decreases when Tau is hyperphosphorylated [31]. b. 2D [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 125 μM 15N CDK-phosphorylated Tau-F5[165–245] free in solution (gray) and with a 1 molar amount of GST-BIN1/SH3 (red, superimposed): Overlaid details of 2D [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra presented in Additional file 6. c. 2D [1H, 15N] HSQC spectra of 60 μM 15N CDK-phosphorylated 2N4R Tau free in solution (gray) and with a 2 molar amount of GST-BIN1/SH3 (blue, superimposed): Overlaid details of full spectra presented in Additional file 7
Fig. 3BIN1-Tau complexes partly co-localize with the actin cytoskeleton network. a. Immunofluorescence staining of endogenous BIN1 (green) and total Tau (red) in primary neuron cultures. Arrows indicate the co-localization of BIN1 and total Tau staining. b. PLAs (green) were been used to visualize endogenous BIN1-Tau complexes. Co-staining for total Tau (red) was compared with the PLA (BIN1/total Tau) signal. The arrow indicates the PLA signal located at the end of microtubule structures. c. Immunofluorescent staining of endogenous tubulin (tub, in green) and total Tau (red) in primary neuron cultures. d. A PLA (green) for visualizing endogenous complexes between tubulin and total Tau, combined with immunofluorescent staining of total Tau (red). e. A PLA for BIN1/total Tau (green) was combined with actin staining (red) using Alexa-Fluor633 phalloidin. The arrow shows the location of the PLA signal, with actin staining . f. A 3D image showing the proximity of the green (BIN1/total Tau) signal to the actin staining. A 3D video is presented in Additional file 11. Mag: magnification
Fig. 4BIN1-Tau complexes are rarely co-localized with clathrin-coated membranes and are not co-localized with synaptic markers. a. A PLA for Tau-BIN1 (green) and clathrin staining (red) in primary neuron cultures. b. A PLA for Tau-BIN1 (green) and the pre-synaptic marker synaptophysin (red) in primary neuron cultures. c. A PLA for Tau-BIN1 (green) and the post-synaptic marker PSD95 (red) in primary neuron cultures. Upper panels: maximum intensity projection. Lower panels: a single confocal Z-stack. Mag: magnification
Fig. 5Specific Tau phosphorylation patterns for endogenous BIN1-Tau complexes in primary neuron cultures. A PLA (green) combining anti-BIN1 with either anti-phospho Tau pS396-404 a, pS202 c. or pT231 e antibodies. There was no PLA signal when anti-Tau pT231 was combined with anti-BIN1. Conventional immunofluorescence staining for BIN1 (cyan) and phospho-Tau (red) obtained with the antibodies used in the PLAs (pS396-404 b, pS202 d or pT231 f). g. Quantification of PLA fluorescence intensity in three fields and three independent experiments. The graph shows the ratio between the PLA intensity for BIN1/phosphoTau and phosphoTau alone. (n = 3) AU: arbitrary units. The error bars correspond to the SD