Impaired tau-microtubule interactions are prevalent among pathogenic tau variants arising from missense mutations

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Abstract

tau is a microtubule (MT)-associated protein that promotes tubulin assembly and stabilizes MTs by binding longitudinally along the MT surface. tau can aberrantly aggregate into pathological inclusions that define Alzheimer's disease, frontotemporal dementias, and other tauopathies. A spectrum of missense mutations in the tau-encoding gene microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT) can cause frontotemporal dementias. tau aggregation is postulated to spread by a prion-like mechanism. Using a cell-based inclusion seeding assay, we recently reported that only a few tau variants are intrinsically prone to this type of aggregation. Here, we extended these studies to additional tau mutants and investigated their MT binding properties in mammalian cell-based assays. A limited number of tau variants exhibited modest aggregation propensity in vivo, but most tau mutants did not aggregate. Reduced MT binding appeared to be the most common dysfunction for the majority of tau variants due to missense mutations, implying that MT-targeting therapies could potentially be effective in the management of tauopathies.

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Xia, Y., Sorrentino, Z. A., Kim, J. D., Strang, K. H., Riffe, C. J., & Giasson, B. I. (2019). Impaired tau-microtubule interactions are prevalent among pathogenic tau variants arising from missense mutations. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 294(48), 18488–18503. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA119.010178

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