Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P10636 (tau protein)
5,110 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this paper the actual issues of pathomorphology and pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease are discussed. The importance of beta-amyloid is recognized. The linkage between late-onset form of Alzheimer's disease and the mutations of gene encoding the amyloid precursor protein (on chromosome 21) was found. Phosphorylation of paired helical filament (which are composed of tau protein) plays the important role. There is evidence for a strong association between apolipoprotein E genotype (on chromosome 19) and late-onset dementia of Alzheimer's type. Two more genes were recently identified: PS-1 and PS-2. Their mutations occur in 70-80% cases of early-onset form of the disease. There is much information about the role of head injury, cholinergic deficiency, estrogen, nerve growth factor and the decline in brain glucose metabolism. Our current knowledge can lead to development of prevention strategies and early recognition of Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:[Pathomorphology and pathogenesis of changes in Alzheimer's disease]. 992 Sep 95

In terminal Alzheimer's disease (AD) the frequency of plaques was found to be reduced in single cases. To test this finding in a larger sample, and in order to determine whether the number of plaques labeled with different markers and the distribution of neurofibrillary tangles are correlated positively to each other and to the degree of dementia, a sample of 134 autopsy brains with and 15 without AD-related pathology has been examined. All of the cases were staged according to Braak and Braak. Both the frequency of plaques immunopositive for beta-amyloid, amyloid precursor protein, and apolipoprotein E and that of microglial cells in the cortex and in the white matter were determined semiquantitatively. The content and distribution of PHF-tau was ascertained by ELISA and immunohistochemistry. Both the clinical dementia rating and the global deterioration scale were used as clinical parameters retrospectively. Correlation coefficients were calculated for all parameters and differences were evaluated statistically. With progressive distribution of neurofibrillary tangles and increasing content of PHF-tau the plaque stages and the degree of cortical microglia reaction increased up to the Braak-stages IV and V, thereafter showing a slightly decreasing tendency in the investigated regions. In end-stage AD resorption of beta-amyloid seems to surpass its deposition. The microglial reaction in the white matter correlated neither with the Braak-stage nor with the accumulation of amyloid. With regard to the degree of dementia, both scales correlated well with the pathological changes. Our data show that neuronal cytoskeletal alterations progressively increase with progressive dementia until the end stage of AD in contrast to the frequencies of plaques and cortical microglial cells, and are therefore preferable for staging purposes.
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PMID:Progression of neurofibrillary changes and PHF-tau in end-stage Alzheimer's disease is different from plaque and cortical microglial pathology. 1019 10

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.
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PMID:[Neuronal cell death--what we can see and what we cannot]. 1037 83

The polymorphism of apolipoprotein E (apoE) has been recognized as a genetic risk factor in different neurodegenerative disorders, with or without tau protein- related neuropathology, but few published epidemiological data are available as concerns the association of different apoE alleles with two relatively rare forms of dementia, Pick's disease (PiD) and Huntington's disease (HD). In this study the frequency of the apoE4 allele was examined in 36 persons with histopathologically proven PiD and compared with that of the apoE genotype in 28 HD probands and 79 aged healthy controls. The E4 allele was overrepresented selectively in PiD (42%) as compared with the control population (7%). No such association was found for HD probands (9%). This finding lends further support to the hypothesis that the E4 genotype is not an Alzheimer's disease specific susceptibility factor, and that it could be present in diverse dementing disorders with tau protein related neuropathology, such as PiD.
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PMID:Apolipoprotein E polymorphism in Pick's disease and in Huntington's disease. 1092 69

A cholinergic hypofunction in Alzheimer's disease (AD) may lead to formation of beta-amyloids that might impair the coupling of M1 muscarinic ACh receptors (mAChRs) with G proteins. This disruption in coupling can lead to decreased signal transduction, to a reduction in levels of trophic amyloid precursor proteins (APPs), and to generation of more beta-amyloids that can also suppress ACh synthesis and release, aggravating further the cholinergic deficiency. These "vicious cycles," a presynaptic and a postsynaptic one, may be inhibited, in principle, by M1 selective agonists. Such properties can be detected in the functionally selective M1 agonists from the AF series [e.g., project drugs, AF102B, AF150(S)]. These M1 agonists promote the nonamyloidogenic APP processing pathways and decrease tau protein phosphorylation. The effects on tau proteins suggest a link between M1 mAChR-mediated signal transduction system(s) and the neuronal cytoskeleton via regulation of phosphorylation of tau microtubule-associated protein. This may indicate a dual role for M1 agonists: as inhibitors of two "vicious cycles," one induced by beta-amyloids, and the other due to overactivation of certain kinases (e.g., glycogen synthase kinase-3, GSK-3) or downregulation of phosphatases, respectively. Prolonged administration of AF150(S) in apolipoprotein E-knockout mice restored cognitive impairments, cholinergic hypofunction, and tau hyperphosphorylation, and unveiled a high-affinity binding site to M1 mAChRs. Except M1 agonists, there are no reports of compounds having such combined effects, for example, amelioration of cognition dysfunction and beneficial modulation of APPs together with tau phosphorylation. This unique property of M1 agonists to alter different aspects of AD pathogenesis could represent the most remarkable, yet unexplored, clinical value of such compounds.
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PMID:M1 muscarinic agonists as potential disease-modifying agents in Alzheimer's disease. Rationale and perspectives. 1119 70

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) belongs to a group of neurodegenerative disorders known as tauopathies, characterized by intracellular aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau protein in the brain. Some tauopathies, like Alzheimer's disease (AD), consistently show increased levels of tau protein in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). However, similar studies in FTD populations have shown variable results, although mutations in the tau gene are identified as causes of disease in certain FTD families. In the present study, a Swedish clinic-based FTD population was investigated with respect to CSF tau levels, apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype distribution and occurrence of mutations in the tau gene. CSF tau levels were significantly increased among FTD patients (534 +/- 235 pg tau/ml, P < 0.001) (n = 47) compared to controls (316 +/- 137 pg tau/ml) (n = 51). Furthermore, a strong increase in the APOE epsilon4 allele frequency was found in the FTD population, as 52% were epsilon4 carriers, compared to 21% of the controls. However, no mutations in the tau gene were identified. These findings support the present notion of a common pathogenic pathway in the disease processes for several tauopathies, with both APOE epsilon4 and CSF tau being a pathological link between the different disorders. Furthermore, we conclude that mutations in the tau gene are a rare cause of FTD. .
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PMID:Clinic-based cases with frontotemporal dementia show increased cerebrospinal fluid tau and high apolipoprotein E epsilon4 frequency, but no tau gene mutations. 1125 29

Immunoreactivities of total apolipoprotein E (ApoE-IR), amyloid beta peptide(1-42) (Abeta42-IR), interleukin-6 (IL-6-IR), substance P (SPIR) and total tau protein (TTIR) were measured in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid samples of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), non-Alzheimer's dementias (NAD), neurological disorders without cognitive impairment (OND) and controls without central nervous system disease using sensitive and specific enzyme immunoassay methods. TTIR was highly significantly increased (P < 0,001) and Abeta42-IR was significantly decreased (P < 0,001 vs. OND/CO, P < 0,03 vs. NAD) in the AD cohort compared with the other diagnostic groups. Significant increases in AD were also found for ApoE-IR (P < 0,001) and IL-6 (P < 0,03), but there was a considerable overlap between groups. In the total AD cohort, SPIR was not significantly changed, but AD patients with late disease onset (>65 years) showed significantly higher values than both early onset patients (<65 years) and controls (P < 0,05). Discriminant function analysis showed that Abeta42-IR (cut-off value 375pg/ml) and TTIR (cut-off value 440 pg/ml) levels contributed most to the group classification of patients. At 85% sensitivity for AD and 100% specificity for controls, the combined evaluation of Abeta42-IR and TTIR in this cross-sectional study resulted in a graph separating AD from non-AD patients with increased specificity of 91% and 75% for AD versus OND and NAD, respectively.
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PMID:Clinical significance of neurobiochemical profiles in the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid of Alzheimer's disease patients. 1131 76

The finding that APOE (the gene encoding apolipoprotein E) polymorphic variation was associated with an altered risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) was a significant advance and immediately prompted a search for the mechanisms responsible for this alteration. Some 6 years later, a number of different hypotheses remain that might account for this influence on pathogenesis with no single mechanism being unequivocally accepted. The different approaches to understanding these mechanisms can be broadly categorized as: those suggesting a remote effect, such as different rates of vascular risk factors in those with the different APOE alleles; those proposing altered neuronal vulnerability, perhaps due to apolipoprotein E (ApoE)-isoform-specific differences in local cholesterol transport; and those hypotheses postulating an ApoE interaction with the two key lesions of AD, plaques and tangles. In this chapter we will review the evidence for and against an interaction between ApoE and the neuronal cytoskeleton, in particular with the microtubule-associated protein tau.
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PMID:Apolipoprotein E gene and Alzheimer's disease: is tau the link? 1144 27

In humans, the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) is polymorphic with the alleles APOE epsilon 2, 3 and 4 coding for apolipoproteins (Apo) E2, 3 and 4. Apart from age, the APOE epsilon 4 allele represents the most important risk factor in sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD). Compared to APOE epsilon 3 homozygotes, the histopathological onset of tau pathology is found 1-2 decades earlier but progresses with the same speed. ApoE dose-dependently and specifically increases free intraneuronal calcium levels in the order ApoE4 > ApoE3 > ApoE2. This effect is amplified in the presence of beta A4-peptide. The ApoE effects on calcium are not affected by the blockade of action potentials with tetrodotoxin, or by inhibition of common ApoE binding sites. The calcium channel involved has been identified as a P/Q-type-like channel. Brain tissue ApoE levels differ with respect to APOE alleles and Braak-stage for Alzheimer-histopathology. The production of ApoE in astrocytes is controlled by several receptor/effector systems such as adrenoceptors and cAMP. In the presence of beta A4-peptide fragments, astrocytes stop their synthesis of ApoE resulting in a massive reduction in the bioavailability of ApoE. In the periphery, ApoE directs cholesterol transport and thereby influences its cellular concentrations. In neurons, changes in the concentration of cholesterol influence the phosphorylation status of the microtubule-associated protein tau at sites known to be altered in AD.
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PMID:Apolipoprotein E and beta A4-amyloid: signals and effects. 1144 28

There are numerous polymorphisms within the tau gene but these are in complete linkage disequilibrium and exist as two common extended haplotypes H1 and H2. We have investigated the frequency of these haplotypes in 83 cases of sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) using the +34 polymorphism in intron 11 of the tau gene as a marker of H1 and H2 haplotypes. The total amount of hyperphosphorylated tau protein (tau load), present as neurofibrillary tangles, neuropil threads or plaque neurites, was quantified in the frontal cortex of these patients and related to tau haplotype. We found no increase in H1H1 haplotype in this autopsy population of cases with AD compared to published control data. Stratification of cases for apolipoprotein E (APO E) genotype showed a slight, but not statistically significant, overrepresentation of epsilon 4 allele amongst bearers of H2 haplotype. There were no overall differences in tau load between haplotype groups though cases within each haplotype group bearing APO E epsilon 4 allele had a significantly higher tau load than those without epsilon 4 allele. Neither age at onset or duration of illness differed according to tau haplotype. We conclude that the frequency of tau gene H1 haplotype is not elevated in AD and possession of this has no impact upon the amount of tau pathology in AD.
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PMID:A polymorphism within intron 11 of the tau gene is not increased in frequency in patients with sporadic Alzheimer's disease, nor does it influence the extent of tau pathology in the brain. 1198 40


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