1. Increase in tau tyrosine phosphorylation correlates with the formation of tau aggregates.
- Author
-
Vega IE, Cui L, Propst JA, Hutton ML, Lee G, and Yen SH
- Subjects
- Aging metabolism, Alzheimer Disease genetics, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Alzheimer Disease physiopathology, Animals, Brain pathology, Brain physiopathology, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Humans, Inclusion Bodies genetics, Inclusion Bodies metabolism, Inclusion Bodies pathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Mutation, Missense genetics, Nerve Degeneration genetics, Nerve Degeneration physiopathology, Neurons pathology, Phosphorylation, Protein Isoforms genetics, Protein Isoforms metabolism, Tauopathies genetics, Tauopathies physiopathology, Up-Regulation physiology, Brain metabolism, Nerve Degeneration metabolism, Neurons metabolism, Tauopathies metabolism, Tyrosine metabolism, tau Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Tauopathies are neurodegenerative disorders characterized by aberrant intracellular aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau. It has been shown that aggregated tau is phosphorylated at serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues. However, the occurrence of tyrosine phosphorylation on tau proteins at different states of tau aggregation has not been shown. In this report, we utilized the tauopathy mouse model JNPL3 that expresses human 0N4R tau isoform bearing the missense P301L mutation to study the occurrence of tau tyrosine phosphorylation in the course of the development of tau aggregation. These mice develop behavioral and motor deficits and form sarkosyl-insoluble hyperphosphorylated tau in an age-dependent manner. Mass spectrometry analyses of immunopurified brain tau proteins from JNPL3 and Alzheimer's disease affected individual uncovered novel tau tyrosine-phosphorylated sites. Further studies demonstrated that the abundance of tyrosine-phosphorylated tau increases in an age-dependent manner in JNPL3 mice. Tyrosine-phosphorylated tau was detected in both soluble and sarkosyl-insoluble preparations derived from brain and spinal cord, and localized in neurons containing aggregated tau. The phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in tau appeared to occur along with that of serine and threonine residues and was not detectable in non-transgenic littermates and transgenic mice expressing 0N4R wild-type human tau. The results suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation is as important as phosphorylation of other residues in tauopathy.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF