| Literature DB >> 29497399 |
Michel Goedert1, Yoshiki Yamaguchi2, Sushil K Mishra2, Makoto Higuchi3, Naruhiko Sahara3.
Abstract
A pathological pathway leading from soluble, monomeric to insoluble, filamentous Tau, is believed to underlie human Tauopathies. Cases of frontotemporal dementia are caused by dominantly inherited mutations in MAPT, the Tau gene. They show that dysfunction of Tau protein is sufficient to cause neurodegeneration and dementia. Extrapolation to the more common sporadic Tauopathies leads one to conclude that the pathological pathway is central to the development of all cases of disease, even if there are multiple reasons for Tau assembly. These findings are conceptually similar to those reported for beta-amyloid, alpha-synuclein and prion protein. Here, we provide an overview of Tau filaments and their positron emission tomography ligands.Entities:
Keywords: Tauopathy; cryo-electron microscopy; filamentous tau aggregate; positron emission tomography ligand; tau isoform; tau protein
Year: 2018 PMID: 29497399 PMCID: PMC5818396 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Human brain Tau isoforms and disease-causing MAPT mutations. (A) MAPT and the six Tau isoforms expressed in adult human brain. MAPT consists of 16 exons (E). Alternative mRNA splicing of E2 (red), E3 (green), and E10 (yellow) gives rise to six Tau isoforms (352–441 amino acids). The constitutively spliced exons (E1, E4, E5, E7, E9, E11, E12, and E13) are shown in blue. E0, which is part of the promoter, and E14 are non-coding (white). E6 and E8 (violet) are not transcribed in human brain. E4a (orange) is only expressed in the peripheral nervous system. The repeats (R1–R4) are shown, with three isoforms having four repeats each (4R) and three isoforms having three repeats each (3R). The core sequences of the Tau filaments from Alzheimer’s disease brain (V306-F378) determined by cryo-EM are underlined. (B), Mutations in MAPT in cases of frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17T). Forty-nine coding region mutations and 10 intronic mutations flanking E10 are shown.
Neurodegenerative diseases with abundant tau inclusions.
| Alzheimer’s disease |
| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism-dementia complex |
| Anti-IgLON5-related Tauopathy |
| Chronic traumatic encephalopathy |
| Diffuse neurofibrillary tangles with calcification |
| Down’s syndrome |
| Familial British dementia |
| Familial Danish dementia |
| Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker disease |
| Niemann–Pick disease, type C |
| Non-Guamanian motor neuron disease with neurofibrillary tangles |
| Postencephalitic parkinsonism |
| Progressive ataxia and palatal tremor |
| Tangle-only dementia |
| Familial frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism (some |
| Pick’s disease |
| Familial frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism (some |
| Argyrophilic grain disease |
| Corticobasal degeneration |
| Guadeloupean parkinsonism |
| Globular glial Tauopathy |
| Huntington’s disease |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy |
| SLC9A6-related parkinsonism |
| Tau astrogliopathy |
| Familial frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism (some |
Figure 2Tau filaments from FTDP-17T. [1,2] Neuronal Tau filaments from a case with abundant Pick body-like inclusions and a G389R mutation in MAPT (66). [1] Straight filaments form the majority species and [2] strongly stranded twisted filaments are in the minority. [3–5] Tau filaments from cases with neuronal and glial inclusions and a P301L mutation in MAPT or an intronic mutation [from Ref. (67, 68)]. [3] Narrow twisted ribbons and [4] occasional rope-like filaments. [5] Familial multiple system Tauopathy with presenile dementia and other cases caused by MAPT mutations in the intron after E10 are characterized by wide twisted ribbons and neuronal and glial Tau inclusions. The filaments in [3–5] are made of 4R Tau. [6,7] Tau filaments from a case with a V337M mutation in MAPT [from Ref. (69)]. [6] Paired helical and [7] straight filaments are present as in Alzheimer’s disease. Tau inclusions are largely neuronal, and filaments in [6] and [7] are made of 3R and 4R Tau.
Figure 3Molecular docking of PBB3 to paired helical Tau filaments (PHFs) from Alzheimer’s disease brain. (A) Schematic representation of the docking process using Pymol and AutoDock Vina. The PHF core structure was from Ref. (51) (PDB ID: 503L). Out of 100 docking conformations, the top 20 were selected for further analysis. (B) Molecular docking of PBB3 into the PHF protofilament core structure. The top 20 conformations distributed into three clusters (S1, S2, and S3). S1 had the highest affinity for the Tau filament, followed by S2 and S3.