| Literature DB >> 29630551 |
James P Quinn1, Nicola J Corbett1, Katherine A B Kellett1, Nigel M Hooper1.
Abstract
With predictions showing that 131.5 million people worldwide will be living with dementia by 2050, an understanding of the molecular mechanisms underpinning disease is crucial in the hunt for novel therapeutics and for biomarkers to detect disease early and/or monitor disease progression. The metabolism of the microtubule-associated protein tau is altered in different dementias, the so-called tauopathies. Tau detaches from microtubules, aggregates into oligomers and neurofibrillary tangles, which can be secreted from neurons, and spreads through the brain during disease progression. Post-translational modifications exacerbate the production of both oligomeric and soluble forms of tau, with proteolysis by a range of different proteases being a crucial driver. However, the impact of tau proteolysis on disease progression has been overlooked until recently. Studies have highlighted that proteolytic fragments of tau can drive neurodegeneration in a fragment-dependent manner as a result of aggregation and/or transcellular propagation. Proteolytic fragments of tau have been found in the cerebrospinal fluid and plasma of patients with different tauopathies, providing an opportunity to develop these fragments as novel disease progression biomarkers. A range of therapeutic strategies have been proposed to halt the toxicity associated with proteolysis, including reducing protease expression and/or activity, selectively inhibiting protease-substrate interactions, and blocking the action of the resulting fragments. This review highlights the importance of tau proteolysis in the pathogenesis of tauopathies, identifies putative sites during tau fragment-mediated neurodegeneration that could be targeted therapeutically, and discusses the potential use of proteolytic fragments of tau as biomarkers for different tauopathies.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; dementia; proteases; proteolysis; tau; tauopathies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29630551 PMCID: PMC5900574 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig.1Schematic of full-length human tau (2N4R; 441 amino acids) and the other 5 central nervous system isoforms produced due to alternative splicing of the MAPT gene. Tau is divided into an N-terminal projection domain and a C-terminal microtubule-binding domain. N1 and N2 are the N-terminal inserts, P1 and P2 are the proline-rich domains, R1, R2, R3 and R4 make up the repeat domain and R’ is the flanking domain. Within the repeat domain there are two sequences required for aggregation of the tau protein, 275VQIINK280 and 306VQIVYK311. Letters refer to the single amino acid code while the number refers to the position along the length of the tau441 isoform. The splicing name is provided on the left-hand side and these contain 0, 1 or 2 N-terminal inserts and 3 or 4 repeat domains. Figure adapted from [143–145].
Fig.2Schematic of tau proteolysis and its contribution to tauopathy pathogenesis. The physiological role of tau is binding to microtubules and supporting their function, during tauopathy pathogenesis, proteases cleave both 3- and 4-repeat tau into fragments which have been shown to be neurotoxic. Proteolytic fragments of tau can have an increased propensity to be phosphorylated and aggregate into neurofibrillary tangles. Proteolytic cleavage of tau can cause its detachment from the microtubule potentially leading to microtubule collapse (loss of normal function). Neurotoxic fragments, neurofibrillary tangles and other aggregated species such as oligomers and the collapse of microtubules (gain of toxic function) all contribute to the synaptic and neuronal loss underpinning tauopathy-associated neurodegeneration.
Known fragments of tau and their cleavage site, responsible protease, function, use as a biomarker and presence in disease
| Fragment | Cleavage site | Function | Protease if known | Biomarker use | Disease presence |
| 1–13 | D13-H14 | Unknown | Caspase-6 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 14–441 | D13-H14 | Possible role in tangle maturation [ | Caspase-6 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–25 | D25-Q26 | No toxicity observed when overexpressed in neurons [ | Caspase-3 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 26–230 (20-22kDa fragment) | D25-Q26 and R230-T231 | Enriched in synaptic mitochondria and binds to Aβ peptides, exacerbating mitochondrial dysfunction [ | Caspase-3 [ | Increased CSF levels in AD and non-AD associated dementia compared to cognitively unimpaired neurological disease patients [ | Present in AD11 mice [ |
| 1–314 (Δtau314) | D314-L315, unknown whether it undergoes further N-terminal cleavage [ | Lower propensity to aggregate compared to tau441. Exerts its effects on P301L tau, causes it to infiltrate dendritic spines, impair synaptic transmission and drive hippocampal neuronal loss, particularly in the CA1. Tau1 - 314 alone not sufficient to affect memory or synaptic function [ | Caspase-2, however, | Unknown | Elevated in brains of rTg4510 mice [ |
| 315–441 | D314-L315 | Unknown | Caspase-2 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 26–44 | D25-Q26 and K44-E45 | Caused NMDAR-mediated cell death in rat CGC’s [ | Caspase-3 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–44 | K44-E45 | Caused NMDAR-mediated cell death in rat CGC’s [ | Calpain-1 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 45–441 | K44-E45 | Unknown | Calpain-1 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–152 | A152-T153 | Unknown | ADAM10 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 153–441 (Tau-A) | A152-T153 | Unknown | ADAM10 [ | Found in serum from patients with AD and inversely correlates with cognitive test scores [ | Found in serum from rTg4510 mice as well as patients with mild-moderate AD [ |
| 1–156 | G156-A157 | Caused NMDAR-mediated cell death in rat CGC’s [ | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–155 | R155-G156 | Unknown | Purified human thrombin incubated with PHF tau extracted from AD brains resulted in cleavage at multiple peptide bonds [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 156–441 | R155-G156 | Unknown | Thrombin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 156–209 | R155-G156 and R209-S210 | Unknown | Thrombin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 210–441 | R209-S210 | Unknown | Thrombin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 210–230 | R209-S210 and R230-T231 | Unknown | Thrombin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 231–441 | R230-T231 | Unknown | Thrombin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–197 (Projection domain) | Y197-S198 | Unknown | Chymotrypsin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 198–441 (MT-binding domain) | Y197-S198 | Unknown | Chymotrypsin [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 3–230 | A2-E3 and R230-T231 | Unknown | Calpain-2 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 45–230 (17kDa fragment) | K44-E45 and R230-T231 | Transgenic tau45 - 230 mice expressing this fragment exhibited synapse loss and behavioural abnormalities [ | Calpain-1 [ | Unknown | Present in AD, CBD and PSP, but not seen in control brain samples [ |
| 1–242 | R242-L243 | Unknown | Calpain-1 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 243–441 (Tau-CTF24) | R242-L243 | Accelerates intracellular propagation of tau and has reduced capacity for promoting MT assembly compared to tau441 [ | Calpain-1 [ | Yes | Increased with age in Tg601 mice brains [ |
| 125–230 | Q124-A125 and R230-T231 | Fragment not toxic [ | Calpain-2 [ | No | Present in some AD and control brains [ |
| 3–124 | A2-E3 and Q124-A125 | Unknown | Calpain-2 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–255 | N255-V256 | Failed to induce MT polymerization and aggregate into PHFs; however, tau1 - 255 had strong AT8 (phosphorylated tau at S202 and T205) immunoreactivity [ | AEP [ | No | No |
| 256–441 | N255-V256 | Greatly reduced ability to induce MT polymerization but tau256 - 441 had increased propensity to aggregate into PHFs compared to tau441 [ | AEP [ | No | No |
| 256–368 | N255-V256 and N368-K369 | Triggered substantial apoptosis compared to other AEP-cleaved tau fragments or tau441. Moderately increased MT polymerization, as well as increased propensity to aggregate into PHFs compared to tau441 [ | AEP [ | No | No |
| 1–368 | N368-K369 | Reduced ability to induce MT polymerization and triggered substantial apoptosis compared to other AEP-cleaved tau fragments or tau441. Increased propensity to aggregate into PHFs compared to tau441 and tau1 - 368 also had strong AT8 immunoreactivity [ | AEP [ | No | Only AEP-cleaved tau fragment present in AD but not found in control brains [ |
| 369–441 | N368-K369 | Unable to induce MT polymerization and aggregate into PHFs [ | AEP [ | No | No |
| 1–402 (TauΔCasp6) | D402-T403 | Unknown but acts as a marker of caspase-6-induced neurodegeneration [ | Caspase-6 [ | CSF fragment levels distinguished AD from control [ | Correlates with tau pathology in human AD olfactory bulb brain sections [ |
| 403–441 | D402-T403 | Unknown | Caspase-6 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 1–421 (Tau-C) | D421-S422 | Faster aggregation rate and forms twice the amount of filament mass compared to tau441 [ | Caspase-1, -3, -6, -7 and -8 [ | Tau1 - 421 alone not sufficient as serum based biomarker for AD ( | Found associated with NFTs in AD brains [ |
| 422–441 | D421-S422 | Unknown | Caspase-1, -3, -6, -7 and -8 [ | Unknown | Unknown |
| 151–421 (Δtau) | K150-I151 and D421-S422 | Co-expressing tau151 - 421 and human tau441 in mice led to tau aggregation and disruption of axonal transport, mitochondria, Golgi apparatus and synaptic proteins [ | Caspase-1, -3, -6, -7 and -8 cleave at D421-S422 [ | Tau1 - 421 has been used as a biomarker [ | Tau1 - 421 has been found associated with NFTs in AD brains [ |
| 2–441 | M1-A2 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 11–441 | V10-M11 | Increased | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 12–441 | M11-E12 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 103–441 | T102-A103 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 124–441 | T123-Q124 | Cells expressing tau124 - 441 had increased | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 127–441 | R126-M127 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 172–441 | I171-P172 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 174–441 | A173-K174 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 224–441 | P223-K224 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 238–441 | S237-S238 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 240–441 | A239-K240 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 259–441 | S258-K259 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 261–441 | I260-G261 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 280–441 | N279-K280 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 306–441 | S305-V306 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 308–441 | Q307-I308 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 309–441 | I308-V309 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 311–441 | Y310-K311 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 331–441 | H330-K331 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | AD and control brains [ |
| 1–391 | E391-I392 | Increased aggregation propensity and increased nucleation efficiency compared to tau441 [ | Unknown | Unknown | Present at a late stage of aggregation into NFTs [ |
| 392–441 | E391-I392 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown |
| 395–441 | Y394-K395 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown |
| C-terminal tau35 fragment | Cleaved somewhere between P182 and R194 [ | Causes a mouse model to exhibit defective motor function and spatial learning deficit. Induces alterations in kinase activity, lysosomal and synaptic function [ | Unknown | Unknown | Tau35 seen in the brains of patients with AGD [ |
Aβ, amyloid-β; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ADAM10, a disintegrin and metalloprotease; AEP, asparagine endopeptidase; AGD, argyrophilic grain disease; CBD, corticobasal degeneration; CGC, cerebellar granule cells; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MT, microtubule; NFT, neurofibrillary tangles; NMDAR, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor; PHF, paired-helical filament; PD, Parkinson’s disease; PSP, progressive supranuclear palsy; Tg, transgenic.
Fig.3Schematic of human tau441 showing the currently identified proteolytic cleavage sites. A) Proteolytic cleavage sites in tau indicated by the P1-P1’ residues with the protease responsible indicated. Caspase-6 [40, 43, 44, 53], caspase-3 [41, 44], calpain-1 [32, 33, 37], a disintegrin and metalloprotease 10 (ADAM10) [78], initial thrombin cleavage site [137], chymotrypsin [138], calpain-2 [34], human high temperature requirement serine protease A1 (HtrA1) [69], asparagine endopeptidase (AEP) [80], acetylation induced auto-proteolysis sites [87], caspase-2 [42], caspases-1, -7, and -8 [44]. B) Identified cleavage sites in tau where the protease responsible has yet to be identified. Data from [22] and cleavage at E391-I392 [98].