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Query: UNIPROT:P10636 (
tau protein
)
5,110
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recently several responsible genes for hereditary neurodegenerative disorders were identified. In some of them the gene products were found to be aggregated. In the case of Alzheimer disease beta protein and apolipoprotein E accumulated in senile plaques. In CAG repeat diseases the polyglutamine aggregates in neuronal nuclei. More recently alpha synuclein accumulates in Lewy bodies in
Parkinson disease
and
tau protein
accumulates in NFT of hereditary frontotemporal dementia with tau mutation. Those results suggested that the responsible gene products accumulates in the lesion which the products involve in. However, presenilin which is one of the genes for familial Alzheimer disease accumulates in NFT and on the other hand its mutation changes the production ratio of beta 1-42/40, suggesting that the abnormal gene products not simply accumulate the lesion that it involved. The gene products accumulate in different lesions such as in nuclei of polyglutamine diseases, extracellular plaque and cytoplasm of prion disease and extracellular plaques in Alzheimer disease. Some of them are ubiquitinated and some of them are not. Thus the accumulating process in these disorders seems apparently same but is essentially different. We should study more precisely each pathological process of those disorders.
...
PMID:[Neuronal cell death--what we can see and what we cannot]. 1037 83
Alzheimer's disease and
Parkinson's disease
are the most common neurodegenerative diseases. They are characterized by the degeneration of selected populations of nerve cells that develop filamentous inclusions before degeneration. The neuronal inclusions of Alzheimer's disease are made of the
microtubule-associated protein tau
, in a hyperphosphorylated state. Recent work has shown that the filamentous inclusions of
Parkinson's disease
are made of the protein alpha-synuclein and that rare, familial forms of
Parkinson's disease
are caused by missense mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene. Besides
Parkinson's disease
, the filamentous inclusions of two additional neurodegenerative diseases, namely dementia with Lewy bodies and multiple system atrophy, have also been found to be made of alpha-synuclein. Abundant filamentous tau inclusions are not limited to Alzheimer's disease. They are the defining neuropathological characteristic of frontotemporal dementias such as Pick's disease, and of progressive supranuclear palsy and corticobasal degeneration. The recent discovery of mutations in the tau gene in familial forms of frontotemporal dementia has provided a direct link between tau dysfunction and dementing disease. The new work has established that tauopathies and alpha-synucleinopathies account for most late-onset neurodegenerative diseases in man. The formation of intracellular filamentous inclusions might be the gain of toxic function that leads to the demise of affected brain cells.
...
PMID:Filamentous nerve cell inclusions in neurodegenerative diseases: tauopathies and alpha-synucleinopathies. 1043 13
alpha-Synuclein has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative disorders based on the direct linking of missense mutations in alpha-synuclein to autosomal dominant
Parkinson's disease
and its presence in Lewy-like lesions. To gain insight into alpha-synuclein functions, we have investigated whether it binds neuronal proteins and modulates their functional state. The
microtubule-associated protein tau
was identified as a ligand by alpha-synuclein affinity chromatography of human brain cytosol. Direct binding assays using (125)I-labeled human tau40 demonstrated a reversible binding with a IC(50) about 50 pM. The interacting domains were localized to the C terminus of alpha-synuclein and the microtubule binding region of tau as determined by protein fragmentation and the use of recombinant peptides. High concentrations of tubulin inhibited the binding between tau and alpha-synuclein. Functionally, alpha-synuclein stimulated the protein kinase A-catalyzed phosphorylation of tau serine residues 262 and 356 as determined using a phospho-epitope-specific antibody. We propose that alpha-synuclein modulates the phosphorylation of soluble axonal tau and thereby indirectly affects the stability of axonal microtubules.
...
PMID:alpha-synuclein binds to Tau and stimulates the protein kinase A-catalyzed tau phosphorylation of serine residues 262 and 356. 1046 79
The precursor of the non-Abeta-component of Alzheimer's disease (AD) amyloid (NACP, alpha-synuclein) aggregates into insoluble filaments of Lewy bodies (LBs) in
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and dementia with LBs (DLB). The
microtubule-associated protein tau
is an integral component of filaments of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). NFTs are occasionally found in brains of PD and DLB; however, the presence of NFTs or tau-epitopes within LB-containing neurons is rare. Double-immunofluorescence study and peroxidase-immunohistochemical study in serial sections, performed to examine the co-localization of tau- and NACP-epitopes in the brainstem of PD and DLB, demonstrated that four different epitopes of tau including phosphorylation-dependent and independent ones were present in a minority of LBs, but more often than previously considered. A tau (tau2)-epitope was localized to filaments in the outer layers of brainstem-type LBs by immunoelectron microscopy. Therefore, we conclude that tau is incorporated into filaments in certain LBs. Extensive investigation has enabled us to classify this co-localization into four types: type 1, LBs with ring-shaped tau-immunoreactivity; type 2, LBs surrounded by NFTs; type 3, NACP- and tau-immunoreactive filamentous and granular masses; and type 4, NACP- and tau-immunoreactive dystrophic neurites. This study raises a new question whether aggregation and hyperphosphorylation of tau in PD and DLB are triggered by the collapse of intraneuronal organization of microtubules due to NACP-filament aggregation in neuronal perikarya and axons.
...
PMID:Cellular co-localization of phosphorylated tau- and NACP/alpha-synuclein-epitopes in lewy bodies in sporadic Parkinson's disease and in dementia with Lewy bodies. 1052 10
L-Deprenyl, an irreversible MAO-B (monoamine oxidase B, EC 1.4.3.4) inhibitor, is used for the treatment of
Parkinson's disease
and to delay the progression of Alzheimer's disease. L-Deprenyl also exhibits protective effects against neuronal apoptosis which are independent of its ability to inhibit MAO-B. The purpose of this study was to compare the antiapoptotic efficacy of L-deprenyl against different types of apoptotic inducers in three neuronal cell culture models. The level of apoptosis was quantified by measuring the activation of caspase-3 enzyme, which is the main apoptotic executioner in neuronal cells. MTT [3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide] and LDH (lactate dehydrogenase, EC 1. 1.1.27) assays were used to demonstrate the cytotoxic response of apoptotic treatments. Our results showed that okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatase 1 and 2A, induced a prominent increase in caspase-3 activity both in cultured hippocampal and cerebellar granule neurons as well as in Neuro-2a neuroblastoma cells. Interestingly, L-deprenyl offered a significant protection against the apoptotic response induced by okadaic acid in all three neuronal models. The best protection appeared at the concentration level of 10(-9) M. L-Deprenyl also provided a protection against apoptosis after AraC (cytosine beta-D-arabinoside) treatment in hippocampal neurons and Neuro-2a cells and after etoposide treatment in Neuro-2a cells. However, L-deprenyl did not offer any protection against apoptosis caused by serum withdrawal or potassium deprivation. Okadaic acid treatment in vivo is known to induce an Alzheimer's type of hyperphosphorylation of
tau protein
, formation of beta-amyloid plaques, and a severe memory impairment. Our results show that the okadaic acid model provides a promising tool to study the molecular basis of Alzheimer's disease and to screen the neuroprotective capacity of L-deprenyl derivatives.
...
PMID:Protective effect of L-deprenyl against apoptosis induced by okadaic acid in cultured neuronal cells. 1079 57
Alpha-synuclein has assumed particular neuropathological interest in the light both of its identification as a non-beta-amyloid plaque constituent in Alzheimer disease (AD), and the recent association between dominant inheritance of
Parkinson disease
(PD) and 2 missense mutations at positions 30 and 53 of the synuclein protein. We report a systematic study of alpha-synuclein, tau, and ubiquitin immunoreactivity in representative neurodegenerative disorders of late life. The alpha-synuclein association with Lewy bodies is variable, peripheral, and is not stable with respect to proteases or acid treatment, whereas there is no association with Pick bodies. Stable patterns of immunoreactivity included neurites and a novel inclusion body. Although there is an overlap between the presence of Lewy bodies and stable alpha-synuclein immunoreactivity, this is seen only in the presence of concomitant neuropathological features of AD. The novel alpha-synuclein inclusion body identified in pyramidal cells of the medial temporal lobe in particular was found in AD and in the Lewy body variant of AD, and was associated neither with ubiquitin nor
tau protein
. The inclusion is therefore neither a Lewy body nor a PHF-core body, but may be confused with the Lewy body, particularly in the Lewy body variant of AD. Abnormal processing of alpha-synuclein leading to its deposition in the form of proteolytically stable deposits is a particular feature of the intermediate stages of AD.
...
PMID:Alpha-synuclein inclusions in Alzheimer and Lewy body diseases. 1088 71
Redox changes within neurones are increasingly being implicated as an important causative agent in brain ageing and neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS),
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Cells have developed a number of defensive mechanisms to maintain intracellular redox homeostasis, including the glutathione (GSH) system and antioxidant enzymes. Here we examine the effects of N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) on beta-amyloid (A beta) secretion and tau phosphorylation in SHSY5Y neuroblastoma cells after exposure to oxidative stress inducing/cytotoxic compounds (H(2)O(2), UV light and toxic A beta peptides). A beta and
tau protein
are hallmark molecules in the pathology of AD while the stress factors are implicated in the aetiology of AD. The results show that H(2)O(2), UV light, A beta 1-42 and toxic A beta 25-35, but not the inactive A beta 35-25, produce a significant induction of oxidative stress and cell cytotoxicity. The effects are reversed when cells are pre-treated with 30 mM NAC. Cells exposed to H(2)O(2), UV light and A beta 25-35, but not A beta 35-25, secrete significantly higher amounts of A beta 1-40 and A beta 1-42 into the culture medium. NAC pre-treatment increased the release of A beta 1-40 compared with controls and potentiated the release of both A beta 1-40 and A beta 1-42 in A beta 25-35-treated cells. Tau phosphorylation was markedly reduced by H(2)O(2) and UV light but increased by A beta 25-35. NAC strongly lowered phospho-tau levels in the presence or absence of stress treatment.
...
PMID:N-acetyl-L-cysteine protects SHSY5Y neuroblastoma cells from oxidative stress and cell cytotoxicity: effects on beta-amyloid secretion and tau phosphorylation. 1114 96
Heterozygous missense and splice-site mutations in the tau gene have been previously identified in familial frontotemporal dementia with autosomal dominant inheritance. Here we report a Spanish kindred in which two brothers born from a third-degree consanguineous marriage were both affected with atypical progressive supranuclear palsy. A homozygous deletion at codon 296 (delN296) was identified in one of the affected siblings. Among the heterozygous carriers, two members with probable
Parkinson's disease
were identified, but none of heterozygotes developed atypical parkinsonism. The delN296 mutation lies in the sequence corresponding to the second tubulin-binding repeat of
tau protein
and affects one asparagine residue absolutely conserved in other species. This finding indicates that homozygous mutations in the tau gene may also cause hereditary tauopathies.
...
PMID:Familial atypical progressive supranuclear palsy associated with homozigosity for the delN296 mutation in the tau gene. 1122 Jul 49
The most common degenerative diseases of the human brain are characterized by the presence of abnormal filamentous inclusions in affected nerve cells and glial cells. These diseases can be grouped into two classes, based on the identity of the major proteinaceous components of the filamentous assemblies. The filaments are made of either the
microtubule-associated protein tau
or the protein alpha-synuclein. Importantly, the discovery of mutations in the tau gene in familial forms of frontotemporal dementia and of mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene in familial forms of
Parkinson's disease
has established that dysfunction of
tau protein
and alpha-synuclein can cause neurodegeneration.
...
PMID:From genetics to pathology: tau and alpha-synuclein assemblies in neurodegenerative diseases. 1126 Aug 2
Intracellular filamentous inclusions made of either the
microtubule-associated protein tau
or the protein alpha-synuclein define the majority of cases of neurodegenerative disease. Mutations in the tau gene in familial forms of frontotemporal dementia and in the alpha-synuclein gene in familial cases of
Parkinson's disease
have provided causal links between the dysfunction of these proteins and neurodegeneration. Over the past year, several novel tau gene mutations have been identified and more has been learned about possible mechanisms by which tau gene mutations lead to frontotemporal dementia. Experimental animal models have provided a link between tau filament formation and nerve cell degeneration. Along similar lines, animal models have been produced that result in the formation of alpha-synuclein filaments and the degeneration of dopaminergic nerve cells. Building on previous work, synthetic alpha-synuclein filaments have been shown to exhibit the characteristics of amyloid.
...
PMID:The significance of tau and alpha-synuclein inclusions in neurodegenerative diseases. 1137 73
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