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Query: UNIPROT:P10636 (
tau protein
)
5,110
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The diffuse nature of the lesions in neurodegenerative parkinsonian syndromes explains the inefficacy of symptomatic treatments and the potential interest of neuroprotector treatments that could slow down or even prevent neuron degeneration in structures involved in the degenerative processes. As these syndromes share preferential degeneration of the substantia nigra with
Parkinson's disease
it is logical to hypothesize that the same mechanisms of neuron death are involved. The responsibility of an exotoxin, with a mechanism of action that would be similar to that of MPTP and/or rotenone, appears to be implicated only in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP): this is suggested by the "guadeloupean parkinsonean" syndrome. There is no evidence demonstrating an exotoxin in corticobasal degeneration (CBD), which might play an anecdotal role in rare cases of multiple system atrophy (MSA). There are rare cases of PSP, sometimes with autopsy proof, generally with autosomal dominant inheritance, but in the much larger number of sporadic cases there is an undeniable genetic susceptibility linked with certain polymorphisms of the
tau protein
gene. Genetic susceptibility plays a much less pronounced role in CBD. There is no argument however in favor of a genetic factor in MSA. A few arguments suggest that oxidative stress is involved in PSP and MSA, or even CBD, but no evidence of a primary effect. Perturbed mitochondrial metabolism is possible in PSP. Undeniable proof of the effect of inflammation, excitotoxicity, and apoptosis remains to be presented. We now have several compounds which could affect different phases of neurodegeneration. Identifying the precise cause of neuronal death is needed to properly choose the most effective therapeutic approach (single drug or multiple drug regimens). Therapeutic assessment should be conducted in patients with certain diagnosis. This apparently evident prerequisite does not however appear to be easy to satisfy as has been demonstrated by anatomoclinical series in PSP and MSA, and even more so in CBD. Use of international criteria does not alleviate the difficulty. Satisfactory criteria of efficacy remain to be identified. Assuming that such trials would be conclusive, there remains the question of how to implement neuroprotection in routine practice. The difficulties encountered are well known: late intervention after development of the disease in sporadic cases, ethical issues concerning preclinical screening in familial forms of the disease or in patients exposed to an exotoxin.
...
PMID:[Neuroprotection and neurodegenerative parkinsonian syndromes]. 1277 94
The saitohin (STH) gene is located in intron 9 of the
tau protein
gene. It has been postulated that the R allele of Q7R polymorphism at the Saitohin gene is over-represented in the homozygous state in sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD). Tau protein was implicated in AD pathophysiology and the tau gene haplotype is probably connected with sporadic late-onset
Parkinson's disease
(PD). We analyzed the STH polymorphism and tau gene haplotype in 100 clinically diagnosed AD cases, 100 PD cases and 100 age-matched healthy controls. We found that the R allele of the STH gene is associated with the H2 haplotype of tau in all cases. Additionally we observed no correlation between R allele frequency and AD or PD.
...
PMID:Strong association between Saitohin gene polymorphism and tau haplotype in the Polish population. 1293 19
Several distinct clinical syndromes presenting with parkinsonism have been associated with subcortical neurofibrillary degeneration and the abnormal accumulation of hyperphosphorylated
tau protein
in the brain. Mutations of tau have been linked with a small number of autosomal dominantly inherited families who present with frontolimbic cognitive deficits, behavioural disorders, and
Parkinson's syndrome
. Some of the sporadic disorders (progressive supranuclear palsy [PSP] and corticobasal degeneration) have been referred to by molecular pathologists as primary tauopathies, implicating abnormalities of tau in their pathogenesis. We have identified a sporadic parkinsonian syndrome characterised by bradykinesia, a variable response to levodopa, and a mean duration of disease of 9 years, which resembles bodig (Parkinson's-dementia of Guam), and histologically has close similarities with both PSP and postencephalitic parkinsonism. Further characterisation of these cases frequently confused with
Parkinson's disease
may broaden the clinical spectrum of parkinsonian disorders linked with neurofibrillary tangle formation.
...
PMID:Parkinson's syndrome associated with neurofibrillary degeneration and tau pathologic findings. 1450 53
Intracellular accumulations of filamentous material composed of tau proteins are defining features of sporadic and familial neurodegenerative disorders termed "tauopathies." In Alzheimer's disease, the most common tauopathy, tau pathology is predominantly localized within neurons; however, robust glial pathology occurs in other tauopathies. Although the pathogenesis of tauopathies remains primarily unknown, molecular chaperones such as heat-shock proteins (HSPs) are implicated in these tau disorders as well as other neurodegenerative diseases characterized by the accumulation of insoluble protein aggregates such as alpha-synuclein in
Parkinson's disease
and polyglutamine in Huntington's disease. We analyzed a variety of tauopathies with antibodies to a panel of HSPs to determine their role in the pathogenesis of these disorders. Although HSPs are not found in neuronal tau inclusions, we demonstrate increased expression of the small HSP alphaB-crystallin in glial inclusions of both sporadic and familial tauopathies. alphaB-crystallin was observed in a subset of astrocytic and oligodendrocytic tau inclusions as well as the neuropil thread pathology in cellular processes, but the co-expression of alphaB-crystallin with tau inclusions was relatively specific to tauopathies with extensive glial pathology. Thus, increased alphaB-crystallin expression in glial tau inclusions may represent a response by glia to the accumulation of misfolded or aggregated
tau protein
that is linked to the pathogenesis of the glial pathology and distinct from mechanisms underlying neuronal tau pathology in neurodegenerative disease.
...
PMID:Expression of the small heat-shock protein alphaB-crystallin in tauopathies with glial pathology. 1469 29
Immunoreactivities of amyloid beta peptide((1-42)) (Abeta42-IR) and total
tau protein
(TTIR) were measured in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid of 48 patients (12 patients in each group) with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), vascular dementia (VD), Alzheimer's disease (AD),
Parkinson's disease
without dementia (PD) and 24 controls (CON) using sensitive and specific enzyme immunoassays. TTIR in NPH was not significantly changed compared with VD, PD and CON, while NPH-Abeta42-IR was significantly decreased compared with PD and CON. In AD, significant increases of TTIR and significant decreases of Abeta42-IR were found. Using a TTIR by Abeta42 plot, all NPH, PD, and CON samples were within the non-AD plot region. 92% of AD and VD samples were within the AD and non-AD area, respectively. We conclude that combined measurement of Abeta42-IR and TTIR contributes to the differential diagnosis of NPH vs. AD and of AD vs. VD, respectively.
...
PMID:Immunoreactivities of amyloid beta peptide((1-42)) and total tau protein in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid of patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus. 1499 54
Mutations in the alpha-synuclein (alpha-syn) gene are responsible for a rare familial parkinsonism syndrome, a finding that has led to extensive characterization of altered alpha-syn structure in sporadic
Parkinson's disease
(PD) and other neurodegenerative disorders. We report here the immunohistochemical, biochemical and ultrastructural characterization of alpha-syn neuropathology in a case of familial PD with the A53T alpha-syn gene mutation. Insoluble filamentous alpha-syn lesions were detected in almost all brain regions examined and as in sporadic PD, we observed the accumulation of insoluble nitrated alpha-syn in this familial disorder. Significant accumulations of filamentous insoluble
tau protein
also were detected in some brain regions of this patient, suggesting a role for A53T mutant alpha-syn in tau fibrillization. Indeed, in vitro studies of tau and alpha-syn fibrillization showed that the A53T mutation accelerated alpha-syn fibril formation, initiated tau assembly into filaments and synergistically enhanced fibrillization of both tau and alpha-syn. Our data implicate fibrillization of alpha-syn and tau in the pathogenesis of PD, and suggest that distinct amyloidogenic proteins may cross-seed each other in neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Fibrillization of alpha-synuclein and tau in familial Parkinson's disease caused by the A53T alpha-synuclein mutation. 1514 54
The
MAPT
H1 haplotype has been associated with four-repeat (4R) tauopathies, including progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration, and argyrophilic grain disease. More controversial is that the same haplotype has been associated with
Parkinson disease
(PD). Using H1-specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms, we demonstrate that
MAPT
H1 is a misnomer and consists of a family of recombining H1 alleles. Population genetics, linkage disequilibrium, and association analyses have shown that specific
MAPT
H1 subhaplotypes are preferentially associated with
Parkinson disease
. Using a sliding scale of
MAPT
H1-specific haplotypes--in age/sex-matched PD cases and controls from central Norway--we have refined the disease association to within an approximately 90-kb interval of the 5' end of the
MAPT
locus.
...
PMID:Linkage disequilibrium and association of MAPT H1 in Parkinson disease. 1529 35
Biomarkers are very important indicators of normal and abnormal biological processes. Specific changes in pathologies, biochemistries and genetics can give us comprehensive information regarding the nature of any particular disease. A good biomarker should be precise and reliable, distinguishable between normal and interested disease, and differential between different diseases. It is believed that biomarkers have great potential in predicting chances for diseases, aiding in early diagnosis, and setting standards for the development of new remedies to treat diseases. New technologies have enabled scientists to identify biomarkers of several different neurodegenerative diseases. The followings, for instance, are only a few of the many new biomarkers that have been recently identified: the phosphorylated
tau protein
and aggregated Beta-amyloid peptide for Alzheimer's disease (AD), Alpha-synuclein contained Lewy bodies and altered dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging for
Parkinson's disease
(PD), SOD mutations for familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and CAG repeats resulted from Huntington's gene mutations in Huntington's disease (HD). This article will focus on the most-recent findings of biomarkers belonging to the four mentioned neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Biomarkers of neurodegenerative disorders: how good are they? 1553 67
The cytoskeleton plays a key role in maintaining the highly asymmetrical shape and structural polarity of neurons that are essential for neuronal physiology. Cytoskeletal reorganization plays a key role in neuritogenesis. In neurodegenerative diseases, the cytoskeleton is abnormally assembled and impairment of neurotransmission occurs. In Alzheimer's disease, abundant amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles constitute the two major neuropathologic alterations present in the brain. Neurofibrillary tangles are formed of paired helical filaments consisting nearly entirely of the
microtubule-associated protein tau
. Under normal conditions tau binds to microtubules, stabilizing neuron structure and integrity. Hyperphosphorylation of tau is assumed to be the cause of formation of paired helical filaments. Another example of cytoskeletal abnormalities present in neurodegenerative diseases are the Lewy bodies considered as cytopathologic markers of
Parkinson's disease
. Lewy bodies are constituted of tubulin, MAP1, and MAP2. Neuronal shape, loss of dendrites and spines, as well as irregular distribution of neuronal elongations occur in specific brain areas of schizophrenic patients. Increase in non-phosphorylated MAP2 and MAP1B at hippocampus has been suggested as responsible for somatodendritic and cytoarchitectural abnormalities found in schizophrenia. In addition, neurofibrillary tangles are more frequent among schizophrenic patients who received pharmacologic antipsychotic treatment. Cumulative evidence suggests that neurodegenerative diseases and psychiatric illnesses are associated with cytoskeletal alterations in neurons that, in turn, loose synaptic connectivity and the ability to transmit incoming axonal information to the somatodendritic domain. We will review evidence supporting that the neuronal cytoskeleton is disrupted in neurodegenerative and some psychiatric diseases, and therefore could be a target for drug therapy. In addition, current data indicating that melatonin, a hormone secreted by the pineal gland, promotes neuritogenesis through cytoskeletal rearrangements and in addition to the potential therapeutic use of melatonin in neurodegenerative diseases will be discussed.
...
PMID:The neuronal cytoskeleton as a potential therapeutical target in neurodegenerative diseases and schizophrenia. 1558 21
To determine whether the
microtubule-associated protein tau
(
MAPT
) and alpha-synuclein (SNCA) genes interact to confer
Parkinson's disease
(PD) susceptibility, we conducted a study of 557 case-control pairs. There was an increased risk of PD for persons with either SNCA 261/261 or
MAPT
H1/H1 genotypes as compared with persons with neither (odds ratio, 1.96; 95% confidence interval, 1.34-2.86; p = 0.0003). However, the combined effect of the two genotypes was the same as for either of the genotypes alone (separate and equal). These findings are consistent with in vitro experiments that revealed tau-mediated fibrillization of alpha-synuclein protein at low concentrations (dose threshold effect).
...
PMID:Interaction of alpha-synuclein and tau genotypes in Parkinson's disease. 1573 11
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