Neurofibrillary tangles and tau phosphorylation

C ONeill (Editor), B Anderton (Editor), M Authelet, R Dayanadan, K Leroy, S Lovestone, J N Octave, L Pradier, N Touchet, G Tremp

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paper

117 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) are a characteristic neuropathological lesion of Alzheimer's disease (AD). They are composed of a highly-phosphorylated form of the microtubule-associated protein tau. We are investigating the relationship between NFTs and microtubule stability and how tau phosphorylation and function is affected in transgenic models and by co-expression with beta -amyloid precursor protein and presenilins. In most NFT-bearing neurons, we observed a strong reduction in acetylated a-tubulin immunoreactivity (a marker of stable microtubules) and a reduction of the in situ hybridization signal for tubulin mRNA. In transfected cells, mutated tau forms (corresponding to tau mutations identified in familial forms of frontotemporal dementias linked to chromosome 17) were less efficient in their ability to sustain microtubule growth. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that destabilization of the microtubule network is an important mechanism of cell dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease. The glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta (GSK-3 beta) generates many phosphorylated sites on tau. We performed a neuroanatomical study of GSK-3 beta distribution showing that developmental evolution of GSK-3 beta compartmentalization in neurons paralleled that of phosphorylated tau. Studies on transfected cells and on cultured neurons showed that GSK-3 beta activity controls tau phosophorylation and tau functional interaction with microtubules. Tau phosphorylation was not affected in neurons overexpressing B -amyloid precursor protein. Transgenic mice expressing a human tau isoform and double transgenic animals for tau and mutated presenilin 1 have been generated; a somatodendritic accumulation of phosphorylated transgenic tau proteins, as observed in the pretangle stage in AD, has been observed but NFTs were not found, suggesting that additional factors might be necessary to induce their formation.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationBIOCHEM SOC SYMPOSIUM
Place of PublicationLONDON
PublisherPORTLAND PRESS LTD
Pages81 - 88
Number of pages8
ISBN (Print)1-85578-133-6
Publication statusPublished - 2001
EventAnnual Symposium of the Biochemical-Society - CORK, Ireland
Duration: 1 Jan 2001 → …

Publication series

NameBIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY SYMPOSIUM

Conference

ConferenceAnnual Symposium of the Biochemical-Society
Country/TerritoryIreland
CityCORK
Period1/01/2001 → …

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