| Literature DB >> 31667556 |
Cecilia A Brunello1, Maria Merezhko1, Riikka-Liisa Uronen1, Henri J Huttunen2.
Abstract
Accumulation of misfolded and aggregated forms of tau protein in the brain is a neuropathological hallmark of tauopathies, such as Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Tau aggregates have the ability to transfer from one cell to another and to induce templated misfolding and aggregation of healthy tau molecules in previously healthy cells, thereby propagating tau pathology across different brain areas in a prion-like manner. The molecular mechanisms involved in cell-to-cell transfer of tau aggregates are diverse, not mutually exclusive and only partially understood. Intracellular accumulation of misfolded tau induces several mechanisms that aim to reduce the cellular burden of aggregated proteins and also promote secretion of tau aggregates. However, tau may also be released from cells physiologically unrelated to protein aggregation. Tau secretion involves multiple vesicular and non-vesicle-mediated pathways, including secretion directly through the plasma membrane. Consequently, extracellular tau can be found in various forms, both as a free protein and in vesicles, such as exosomes and ectosomes. Once in the extracellular space, tau aggregates can be internalized by neighboring cells, both neurons and glial cells, via endocytic, pinocytic and phagocytic mechanisms. Importantly, accumulating evidence suggests that prion-like propagation of misfolding protein pathology could provide a general mechanism for disease progression in tauopathies and other related neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we review the recent literature on cellular mechanisms involved in cell-to-cell transfer of tau, with a particular focus in tau secretion.Entities:
Keywords: Aggregation; Amyloid; Extracellular vesicles; Prion; Propagation; Tau; Unconventional protein secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31667556 PMCID: PMC7190606 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03349-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1The structural basis of tau function and aggregation. a The domain structure of human tau protein. Location of the projection domain, proline-rich domain, MTBDs, and the parts of tau protein encoded by the alternatively spliced exons 2, 3 and 10 are shown on top of the longest tau isoform (2N4R, 441 aa). Below the location of key phosphorylated residues, the two hexapeptides, the two cysteines and examples of FTLD-associated mutations in the MTBDs are shown. b Microtubules (blue and green) are formed by the assembly of α- and β-tubulin dimers into protofilaments that associate laterally into hollow tubes. Tau (red) binds to the surface of microtubules interacting with α- and β-tubulin via the MTBDs. The image was prepared based on a cryo-EM structure of microtubule-associated synthetic tau (PDB: 6CVN). c Structure of a paired helical filament (PHF) fragment isolated from AD brain. The filaments are formed of anti-parallel β-sheets, with the protofilament core formed by the four MTBDs of tau. The location of the tau hexapeptide sequence is indicated. Image was prepared based on a cryo-EM structure (PDB: 5O3L)
The principal neurodegenerative disorders characterized by tau dysfunction and inclusions
| Disease | Familiar/sporadic | Main brain areas affected | Clinical symptoms | Neuronal tau inclusions | Other inclusions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AD | F/S | Entorhinal region, hippocampus, occipital, temporal and parietal cortex | Dementia with learning, language, reasoning, orientation deficits. Behavioral alterations | 3R/4R tau. NF tangles with PHF, neuropil threads, neuritic plaques | Aβ inclusions, TDP-43 inclusions, Hirano bodies, granulovacuolar degeneration. Tau glial inclusions | [ |
| FTDP-17 | F | Highly variable depending on mutations. Frontal and temporal gyri, anterior temporal lobe | Behavioral and personal abnormalities, cognitive deficits with aphasia and parkinsonism | 3R/4R tau. NF tangles and Pick’s bodies. Filament morphology depends on MAPT mutations | Tau coiled bodies in oligodendroglia, tufted astrocytes, astrocytic plaques | [ |
PSP CBD | S | Highly variable depending on sub-syndromes. Mild atrophy in posterior frontal and precentral gyri (PSP), and superior frontal and parietal regions (CBD) | Variable depending on sub-syndromes. Dementia, rigidity apraxia, non-fluent aphasia, parkinsonism | 4R-tau. Flame-shape NF tangles and globose NF tangles (corticobasal bodies in monoaminergic neurons). Neuropil threads | Tufted astrocytes in PSP, astrocytic plaque in CBD, coiled bodies in oligodendroglia in both | [ |
| PiD | F/S | Atrophy in frontal, temporal and sometimes parietal lobe, and limbic structures | Speech impairment, aphasia, disinhibition, apathy | 3R-tau. Pick’s bodies, few NF tangles | Sparse tau glial inclusions | [ |
| AGD | S | Mostly unchanged, mild atrophy in frontotemporal cortex | Mild cognitive impairment | 4R-tau. Argyrophilic grains, NF tangles in limbic areas. Straight filaments | Coiled bodies in oligodendroglia | [ |
| Parkinsonism-dementia complex of Guam | S | Diffused atrophy, particularly in frontotemporal lobes, hippocampus, parahippocampus and white matter | Rigidity, tremors, bradykinesia, dementia, olfactory dysfunctions | 4R-tau. NF tangles with PHF and straight filaments. Neuropil threads | Astrocytic hazy inclusions, coiled bodies in oligodendroglia | [ |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, FTDP-17 frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonisms linked to chromosome 17, PSP progressive supranuclear palsy, CBD corticobasal degeneration, PiD Pick’s disease, AGD argyrophilic grain disease
Fig. 2Mechanisms of cell-to-cell transfer of pathological tau protein. Pathological tau conformers can be transferred between cells by multiple non-exclusive mechanisms. (1) Tau secretion directly through the PM involves clustering of tau at the PM, interaction with specific lipids in cholesterol/sphingomyelin/PI(4,5)P2-rich membrane microdomains, penetration through the PM and release from the PM facilitated by cell surface HSPGs. This unconventional tau secretion mechanism resembles the secretion of FGF2 (UPS I-like). (2) Tau is secreted in ectosomes shed from the PM. Ectosomes are larger than exosomes and also differ in their molecular composition. After their release from cells, both ectosomes and exosomes function similarly and can be fused to or endocytosed by target cells. (3) Secretion of tau in exosomes and via organelle hitchhiking. Tau can be packed in exosomes by inward budding of late endosome membrane leading to formation of intraluminal vesicles in multivesicular bodies (MVB) that can be secreted by fusion of MVB membrane with the PM. Other organelle hitch-hiking (UPS III-like) pathways possibly involved in secretion of tau and other misfolded cytosolic proteins include secretory endo-lysosomes, related to the autophagy-lysosomal pathway. The MAPS pathway promotes secretion of cytosolic misfolded proteins by chaperone-mediated capture of misfolded cytosolic proteins to the ER, followed by secretion via fusion of endo-lysosomal vesicles with the PM releasing vesicle-free tau in the extracellular space. (4) Cell-to-cell transfer of tau seeds via tunneling nanotubes that directly connect the cytosols of two neighboring cell. Regardless of the secretion pathway, tau aggregates eventually reach the cytosol of the recipient cells, allowing templated seeding of healthy tau molecules into misfolded pathological conformations. The recipient cells can then propagate the pathology further to other previously unaffected cells. It is currently unclear which ones of the above mechanisms are involved in synaptic release of tau, and whether the synaptic release of physiological and pathological forms of tau are mediated by the same mechanism(s)
Summary of published evidence supporting different pathways involved in tau secretion
| Mechanism | System | Cellular tau | Extracellular tau | References | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endogenous | Overexpressed WT | Overexpressed mutated | Vesicle-associated tau | Vesicle-free tau | Description of extracellular tau | |||
| Unconventional secretion (UPS I-like, directly through the plasma membrane) | Cell line | X | 0–7% | 93–100% | Phosphorylated, soluble oligomers | [ | ||
| X | 0% | 100% | Full-length, monomeric | [ | ||||
| Primary neurons | X | N/D | N/D | [ | ||||
| iPSC neurons | X | N/D | N/D | Phosphorylated (T231) | [ | |||
| Secretion using intracellular vesicles (UPS III-like) | Cell line | X | < 10%a | < 90%a | Vesicular: tau fragments | [ | ||
| X | (X) | Yes | Yes/N/D | Phosphorylated (T181, S199, T231, S262, 361 S356, and S396); vesicular: C-term fragments, phosphorylated | [ | |||
| X | Yes | Yes | [ | |||||
| X | (X) | (X) | N/D | N/D | [ | |||
| X | (X) | Yes/N/D | N/D | Vesicular: full-length tau, 12% of tau is sarkosyl-insoluble aggregates | [ | |||
| Primary neurons | X | X | Yes | N/D | [ | |||
| X | N/D | N/D | [ | |||||
| X | 2% | 98% | Vesicular: full-length tau, hypophosphorylatedb | [ | ||||
| X | Yes | Yes | Vesicular: full-length tau and fragments | [ | ||||
| iPSC neurons | X | X | 100% | 0% | Vesicular: contains phosphorylated (S396/S404) and misfolded tau | [ | ||
| X | < 10%a | < 90%a | Vesicular: 80% of tau is full-length tau; Vesicular-free: only 17% of tau is full-length tau | [ | ||||
| Rodent brain/ISF | X | X | (X) | Yes | N/D | Vesicular: mostly full-length tau, phosphorylated | [ | |
| X | (X) | Yes/N/D | N/D | Vesicular: full-length and fragments; hypophosphorylatedb, oligomeric (only in transgenic mice) | [ | |||
| Human brain/CSF | X | Yes/N/D | Yes/N/D | Vesicular: phosphorylated, monomeric and oligomeric tau fragments | [ | |||
| X | < 10%a | < 90%a | Vesicular: 6% of tau is full-length tau Vesicle-free: 1% of tau is full-length tau | [ | ||||
| Human blood/plasma exosomes | X | Yes | N/D | Vesicular: phosphorylated (T181, S396) | [ | |||
| Lamprey giant neurons | X | N/D | N/D | [ | ||||
| Ectosome/microvesicle shedding | Cell line | X | Yes | N/D | Vesicular: predominantly C-terminal fragments | [ | ||
| Primary neurons | X | 10% | 90% | Ectosomal: full-length and C- or N-terminally truncated | [ | |||
| Rodent brain/ISF | X | Yes | N/D | Ectosomal: full-length tau and fragments | [ | |||
| Human brain/CSF | X | Yes | N/D | [ | ||||
| Lamprey giant neurons | X | N/D | N/D | [ | ||||
| Mechanism unclear | Cell line | X | (X) | no | N/D | [ | ||
| X | > 1 to 10% | 90 to < 99% | Monomers, dimers and soluble pre-aggregates or fibrils | [ | ||||
| X | Yes | < 90%a | Full-length and C-terminally truncated fragments; hypophosphorylatedb (S202, T205, S422, S396/S404) | [ | ||||
| Primary neurons | X | (X) | (X) | 0 to > 20%a/N/D | < 80%a to 95%/N/D | Soluble small oligomers (mostly dimers); Full-length tau, largely dephosphorylated (Ser396/404, Ser199/202/Thr205) | [ | |
| iPSC neurons | X | N/D | N/D | [ | ||||
| Rodent brain/ISF | X | (X) | N/D | N/D | [ | |||
| Human brain/CSF | X | N/D | N/D | Full-length and truncated forms | [ | |||
X analysis was done in a separate experiment or only in part of the experiments shown
aEstimation based on provided images or graphs (quantitative data not provided by the authors)
bCompared to cellular tau