| Literature DB >> 34744602 |
Ben Boyarko1, Vivian Hook1,2.
Abstract
The human tau protein is implicated in a wide range of neurodegenerative "tauopathy" diseases, consisting of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration which includes progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration, Pick's disease, and FTLD-tau (frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism caused by MAPT mutations). Tau gene transcripts in the human brain undergo alternative splicing to yield 6 different tau protein isoforms that are expressed in different ratios in neurodegeneration which result in tau pathology of paired-helical filaments, neurofibrillary tangles, and tau fibrillar aggregates with detrimental microtubule destabilization. Protease-mediated tau truncation is an important post-translational modification (PTM) which drives neurodegeneration in a tau fragment-dependent manner. While numerous tau fragments have been identified, knowledge of the proteolytic steps that convert each parent tau isoform into specific truncated tau fragments has not yet been fully defined. An improved understanding of the relationships between tau isoforms and their proteolytic processing to generate neurotoxic tau fragments is important to the field. This review evaluates tau isoform expression patterns including PTMs and mutations that influence proteolysis of tau to generate toxic fragments that drive cognitive deficits in AD and other tauopathy models. This assessment identifies the gap in the field on understanding the details of proteolytic steps used to convert each tau isoform into fragments. Knowledge of the processing mechanisms of tau isoforms can lead to new protease targeted drug strategies to prevent the formation of toxic tau fragments in tauopathy neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; frontotemporal dementia; mutations; neurotoxicity; protease; tau fragments; tau isoforms; tauopathies
Year: 2021 PMID: 34744602 PMCID: PMC8566764 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.702788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Tau isoforms generated through tau gene expression, alternative RNA splicing, and protein translation. (A) Tau biosynthesis in the CNS. Tau is found on chromosome 17 arm 21. The tau gene contains 16 exons. Exons 1, 4, 5, 7, 13 (light gray) and 9, 11, 12 (light green) are all constitutively transcribed in the CNS (Martin et al., 2011). Exons 9, 11, and 12 encode the R1, R3, and R4 domains, respectively (Martin et al., 2011; Goedert et al., 2017). Exon 10 encodes the R2 domain. Exon -1 is part of the promotor region and is not translated. Exons 4A, 6, and 8 (orange) are mostly expressed in peripheral tissues. Exon 14 is a part of the 3’ untranslated region of the mRNA sequence and is not translated (Goedert et al., 1989; Andreadis, 2005). Tau isoforms are generated by alternate splicing of exons 2 and 3 (light and dark blue) and exon 10 (dark green). The six isoforms range from 352 to 441 amino acids and can be referred to by the clone name as well. Structurally, tau is subdivided into the N-terminal domain, the proline rich domain, microtubule-binding domain region, and the C-terminal domain. (B) R domain MTBR primary sequences. The primary amino acid sequences of the microtubule binding region (MTBR) shows that R1 (243–273), R2 (274–304), R3 (305–335), and R4 (336–367) are partially repeated sequences (Barbier et al., 2019). 275 VQIINK 280 and 306 VQIVYK 311 are two motifs within R2 and R3 that have strong MT interactions and are important for intermolecular β-sheet formation (Moreno-Castillo et al., 2020).
FIGURE 2Progression of tau pathology. Microtubules are stabilized by monomeric tau through the MTBR (microtubule binding region). Hyperphosphorylation decreases tau stability and causes p-tau to dissociate from microtubules, leading to disintegration and disruption of normal axonal transport. Hyperphosphorylated tau gains affinity for other tau monomers, forming oligomeric species, adapting a β-sheet structure prior to NFT and aggregate formation (Maeda et al., 2006). Dissociated tau has a tendency to dimerize in an antiparallel fashion, self-assembling into dimers (Wille et al., 1992). These manifest later into PHFs and ultimately NFTs and fibrillar aggregates which can propagate and mediate cytotoxicity in neuronal cells. Phosphorylation of tau by GSK3β and Cdk5 affects tau-microtubule interactions by reducing tau’s microtubule affinity (Wagner et al., 1996), with protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation at S262 and S214 demonstrating similar effects (Biernat et al., 1993; Schneider et al., 1999). Recent studies have also shown that protein phosphatases (PP) PP1, PP2A, PP2B, and PP5 all dephosphorylate tau in vitro, with PP2A functioning as a major regulator of phosphorylation at multiple sites in the brain. PP2A is also partially down-regulated in AD brains in response to tubulin assembly (Sontag et al., 1999; Liu et al., 2005). Tau also goes a plethora of post-translational modifications such as acetylation, nitration, glycation, glycosylation, ubiquitination, and truncation, many of which are known to increase tau’s propensity to aggregate (Alquezar et al., 2020).
FIGURE 3Tau mutations. Tau mutations among parent tau isoforms are illustrated. MTBR tau missense and deletion mutations located in exon 10 and in exons 9,10, 11, and 12 are found in all six isoforms (R1, R2, and R3) and in only 4R isoforms (R2). The mutations are mapped against 441 aa 2N4R isoform. Reported mutations are can be found associated with familial FTDP-tau and other related tauopathy disorders based on evidence from the literature as follows: mutations are colored coded based on their presence in each of the six tau isoforms, in all six isoforms, in 4R isoforms, or no data on isoform(s) containing the mutation (Wolfe, 2009; Rossi and Tagliavini, 2015; Strang et al., 2019). Mutations with a * in exon 10 are associated with alterations in exon 10 splicing and relative isoform expression levels (Wolfe, 2009; Rossi and Tagliavini, 2015). Presently, the details of what tau fragments are generated from each wild-type or mutant tau isoform has yet to elucidated. It will be essential to assess whether 4R-isoform specific mutations generate different and/or similar fragments compared to normal 4R-isoforms, mutant 3R-isoforms, and normal 3R-isoforms.
Tau fragments in in vivo models displaying memory deficits and/or cellular toxicity.
| Tau fragment | Description of transgenic (Tg) mouse, and transgenes | Memory and behavioral deficits: observed, none, or unknown | Toxicity mechanisms: observed, none, or unknown | Associated proteases | References |
| 1–314 (Δtau314, 35 kDa) | rTg4510 mice expressing tau | Memory deficit observed and correlated with levels of TCP35 tau fragment ( | Impaired synaptic transmission. glutamate receptor dislocation, hippocampal neuronal loss | Caspase-2 cleaves at D314-L315 ( |
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| 187–441 (C-terminal 35 kDa fragment) | Tau35 mice model expressing a 35 kDa tau fragment without mutations and under control of the human tau promotor | Memory deficit and motor dysfunction observed | Increased tau phosphorylation, activation of GSK3b kinase, compromised synaptic function, and impairment of autophagy and lysosome- mediated degradation | Unknown at G186-E187 |
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| 1–255 and 1–368 | Tg mice expressing P301S display tau fragments N255 and N368, generated by AEP. | Memory deficit observed | AEP is up-regulated, and responsible for synapse loss and cognitive deficits shown by AEP knockout. | AEP cleaves at N255-V256 and N368-K369 |
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| 151–421 (Δtau) | TAU62 Tg mice co-expressing 3R tau 151–421 ( | Memory deficit and motor abnormalities observed in all crossed mice. These included gait ataxia, tremor, and hindlimb reflex deficits | Disruption of axonal transport, mitochondria, Golgi apparatus, and synaptic proteins; co- expression led to severe paralysis within 3 weeks and was rescued by cessation of tau151–421 expression | ADAM-10 cleaves nearby at 1151-A152 ( |
|
| 45–230 (17 kDa) | Tg mice expressing 17 kDa tau 45–230, compared to wt mice | Memory and learning abnormalities observed, enhanced fear response (fear conditioning test) and longer time in the morris water maze test. | Tau 45–230 expression resulted in synaptic loss and alterations in NMDA receptor subunits | Calpain-1 cleaves at K44-E45 ( |
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| 243–441 (Tau-CTF24, 24 kDa) | Tg601 mouse overexpressing wild-type human tau (2N4R) that developed hyperphosphorylated- tau | Memory deficit observed | Accelerated intracellular propagation of tau, reduced capacity for MT assembly compared to tau441 | Calpain 1 cleaves at R242-L243 ( |
This table displays tau fragments studied in transgenic mice models that display memory deficits and/or cellular toxicities, with the indicated reference citations. These studies demonstrate that transgenic mice models are useful to the field to study behavioral and memorial abnormalities involving tau fragments.
Tau fragments in in vitro models displaying cellular toxicity.
| Tau fragment | Description of | Toxicity mechanisms of tau | Associated protease | References |
| 1–44 | Cerebellar granule cells from 8-day rats or from 6-day-old ERK1–/– mice | Cell death involving extrasynaptic NMDAR excitotoxicity + ERK1/2 pathway | Calpain-1 cleaves at K44-E45 | |
| 26–44 | Cerebellar granule cells from 8-day rats or from 6-day-old ERK1–/– mice | Cell death involving extrasynaptic NMDAR excitotoxicity + ERK1/2 pathway | Caspase-3 cleaves at K25-Q26, Calpain-1 cleaves at K44-E45 | |
| 26–230 | Adenoviral expression of tau 26–230 in primary neuronal cells, and differentiated neuroblastoma cells undergoing apoptosis by BDNF withdrawal or treatment with staurosporine | NMDA-mediated neurotoxicity | Caspase-3 cleaves at 025–026, Calpain-1 and -2 cleave at R230-T231 |
|
| 1–156 | Cerebellar granule cells obtained from 8-day rats or from 6-day-old ERK1/mice | Unknown | Thrombin cleaves nearby site at R155-G156 | |
| 1–255 | Primary neurons transfected with adeno- associated viruses encoding tau 1–255 | Tau aggregation into PHF with a mixture of tau fragments | AEP cleaves at N255-V256 |
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| 1–368 | Primary neurons transfected with adeno- associated viruses encoding tau 1–368 | Tau assembly into filamentous structures and PHF, triggered apoptosis | AEP cleaves at N368-K369 |
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| 256–368 | Primary neurons transfected with adeno- associated viruses encoding tau 256–268 | Tau assembly into filamentous structures and PHF, triggered apoptosis | AEP cleaves at N255-V256 and N368-K369 |
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| 256–441 | Primary neurons transfected with adeno- associated viruses encoding tau 256–441 | Tau PHFs | AEP cleaves at N255-V256 |
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| 369–441 | Primary neurons transfected with adeno- associated viruses encoding tau 369–441 | Tau aggregation into PHFs with a mixture of fragments | AEP cleaves at N368-K369 |
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| 243–441 (Tau-CTF24, 24 kDa) | N2a cells expressing Tau-CTF24 and Tau- FL and treated with Thioflavin S to measure aggregation SH-SY5Y cells expressing Tau-CTF24 and exposed to various seeds including heparin-induced assembled Tau, Tau- CTF24, or sarkosyl-insoluble pellets from human tauopathies | Higher aggregation, reduced MT stabilization and MT bundling function in N2a cells In SH-SY5Y cells, Tau-CTF24 showed lower seeding than Tau-FL, but Tau-CTF24 showed greater aggregation to various seeds in the ppt fraction compared to Tau- FL | Calpain 1 cleaves at R242-L243 |
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| 1–391 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Significant insoluble tau in cells that expressed 1–391, enhanced aggregation due to deletion of last 50 aa | Unknown at E391-I392 | Gu et al., 20 |
| 1–421 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Tau 1–421 induced mitochondria fragmentation and elevated oxidative stress levels ( | Caspase-1, -3, -6, - 7-, and -8 cleave at D421-S422 | |
| 51–391 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Enhanced aggregation due to deletion of last 50 aa | N/A at T50-P51,unknown at E391-I392 |
|
| 51–421 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | No significant increase in ratio of RIPA insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 51–421 | N/A at T50-P51, Caspase -1, -3, -6, - 7-, and -8 cleave at D421-S422 | |
| 51–441 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | No significant increase in ratio of RIPA insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 51–441 | N/A at T50-P51 |
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| 151–391 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | High self-aggregation capacity | ADAM-1 O cleaves nearby at I151-A152, unknown at E391-I392 |
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| 151–421 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Increases ratio of RIPA-buffer insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 151–421, deletion of last 20 aa decreased ratio slightly | ADAM-10 cleaves at 1151-A152, Caspase -1, -3, -6, - 7-, and -8 cleave at D421-S422 | |
| 151–441 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Increase in ratio of RIPA-buffer insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 151–421 | ADAM-10 cleaves nearby at I151-A152 | |
| 153–441 (Tau-A) | Serum based assay of tissue from confirmed AD post mortem brains, also Tg4510 mice expressing a P301S mutation | Inverse correlation with MDRS, indicating it is related to loss of cognitive ability, elevated 1Ox in Tg4510 mice compared to control mice | ADAM-10 cleaves at A152-T153 |
|
| 231–391 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Low expression of tau 231–391, which may lead to undetectable aggregation of tau 231–391, deletion of last 50 aa did not enhance ratio | Calpain 1–2 cleaves at R230-T231, unknown at E391-I392 | |
| 231–421 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Increase in ratio of RIPA-buffer insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 231–421 | Calpain 1–2 cleaves at R230-T231, Caspase-1, -3, -6, - 7-, and -8 cleave at D421-S422 | |
| 231–441 | HEK-293FT cell expression of tau fragment | Increase in ratio of RIPA-buffer insoluble/soluble tau in cells that expressed tau 231–441 | Calpain 1–2 cleaves at R230-T231 ( | |
| 1–402 (Tau ΔCasp6) | Post morterm brain samples from affected AD temporal and frontal cortex | Neotope antibody to caspase-6 cleaved tau detected intracellular tangles, extracellular tangles, neuropil threads, and neurotic plaques found in temporal and frontal cortex | Caspase 6 at D402-T403 |
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This table includes tau fragments studied
Tau fragments with unknown pathogenic functions.
| Tau fragment | Model description | Toxicity mechanisms | Associated protease | References |
| 1–152 | Brain tissue samples from control Sprague Dawley rats and from Tg4510 tau transgenic mice overexpressing the tau mutant P301L and in confirmed AD post mortem brain | Unknown | ADAM-10 cleaves at A 152-T153 ( |
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| 156–441 | Brain tissue from frontal or temporal regions of normal human brains and from perfused Adult Wistar rat brains, incubated with and without protease inhibitors | Thrombin found to cleave tau, however, toxic mechanisms of fragment not studied | Thrombin cleaves at R155-G156 ( |
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| 156–209 | Brain tissue from frontal or temporal regions of normal human brains and from perfused Adult Wistar rat brains, incubated with and without protease inhibitors | Thrombin found to cleave tau, however, toxic mechanisms of fragment not studied | Thrombin cleaves at R155-G156 and R209-S210 ( |
|
| 210–441 | Brain tissue from frontal or temporal regions of normal human brains and from perfused Adult Wistar rat brains, incubated with and without protease inhibitors | Thrombin found to cleave tau, however, toxic mechanisms of fragment not studied | Thrombin cleaves at R209-S210 ( |
|
| 210–230 | Brain tissue from frontal or temporal regions of normal human brains and from perfused Adult Wistar rat brains, incubated with and without protease inhibitors | Thrombin found to cleave tau, however, toxic mechanisms of fragment not studied | Thrombin cleaves at R209-S210 and R230-T231 ( |
|
| 124–441 | LC-MS/MS spectrometry of peptides from human brain autopsy samples and N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells | None, cells expressing tau 124–441 had increased α- tubulin acetylation, stronger binding to MTs and less sensitive to depolymerization compared to tau 1–441 | Unknown |
|
| 127–441 | LC-MS/MS spectrometry of peptides from human brain autopsy samples and N1E-115 mouse neuroblastoma cells | Unknown | Unknown |
|
This table summarizes identified tau fragments with unknown pathogenic functions, and unknown associated proteases. Tau fragments with unknown toxicity mechanisms and unknown associated proteases were identified in human brain and mouse neuroblastoma cells by
FIGURE 4Tau fragments found in in vitro and in vivo models with pathogenic functions and processing proteases. This figure illustrates a select group of tau proteolytic fragments which have been shown to have to drive neurotoxicity in either in vitro or in vivo models (correlated with Tables 1, 2) and have a known responsible protease. Precipitating proteases are represented by shape symbols and tau fragments are colored coded based on whether they are cleaved by one or multiple proteases. The top fragments are hypothesized to derive from 2N4R isoform as they extend past aa 410, which is the termination point of the second largest tau isoform, 2N3R. Several fragments from Gu et al. (2020) including tau 51–391, tau 51–421, tau 51–441, tau 151–391, tau 231–391, tau 231–421, and tau 231–441 are not included as they were engineered through recombinant plasmid techniques and have not been identified endogenously. Tau 187–441 and tau 1–391 are excluded as it is unclear which proteases cleaves at G186-E187. Tau 1–156 is excluded as it is unclear if thrombin, which cleaves at R155-G156 (Arai et al., 2005) also cleaves at G156-A157. The * symbol indicates that it is unknown what protease cleaves at the N-terminus of tau 151-421. Tau proteolytic fragments have not been studied to precipitate in up-regulated concentrations from 3R- or 4R-isoforms, and it is unclear whether 3R- or 4R-isoforms more toxic fragments. Reference numbers in parentheses refer to cited articles as follows: (1) Zhang et al. (2014); (2) Matsumoto et al. (2015); (3) Ozcelik et al. (2016); (4) Horowitz et al. (2004); (5) Horowitz et al. (2004); (6) Gamblin et al. (2003); (7) Quintanilla et al. (2009); (8) Foveau et al. (2016); (9) Guo et al. (2004); (10) Zhao et al. (2016); (11) Amadoro et al. (2006); (12) Amadoro et al. (2012); (13) Lang et al. (2014); (14) Afreen et al. (2017); (15) Park and Ferreira (2005); (16) Garg et al. (2010); (17) Matthews-Roberson et al. (2008); (18) Yang and Ksiezak-Reding (1995); (19) Arai et al. (2005); (20) Corsetti et al. (2008); and (21) Florenzano et al. (2017).