Acetylation discriminates disease-specific tau deposition

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Abstract

Pathogenic aggregation of the protein tau is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease and several other tauopathies. Tauopathies are characterized by the deposition of specific tau isoforms as disease-related tau filament structures. The molecular processes that determine isoform-specific deposition of tau are however enigmatic. Here we show that acetylation of tau discriminates its isoform-specific aggregation. We reveal that acetylation strongly attenuates aggregation of four-repeat tau protein, but promotes amyloid formation of three-repeat tau. We further identify acetylation of lysine 298 as a hot spot for isoform-specific tau aggregation. Solid-state NMR spectroscopy demonstrates that amyloid fibrils formed by unmodified and acetylated three-repeat tau differ in structure indicating that site-specific acetylation modulates tau structure. The results implicate acetylation as a critical regulator that guides the selective aggregation of three-repeat tau and the development of tau isoform-specific neurodegenerative diseases.

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Chakraborty, P., Rivière, G., Hebestreit, A., de Opakua, A. I., Vorberg, I. M., Andreas, L. B., & Zweckstetter, M. (2023). Acetylation discriminates disease-specific tau deposition. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41672-1

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