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Query: UNIPROT:P10636 (
tau protein
)
5,110
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The causes and the mechanisms of neuronal death in Alzheimer's disease are not elucidated, although some new insights have been proposed over the past years, including free-radical toxicity, beta-amyloid toxicity, excitotoxicity, and disturbed cellular
calcium
metabolism. Some authors have also pointed out that apoptosis could play a role in neuronal degeneration, but it is still largely debated. Here, we review some recent data linking the induction of experimental neuronal apoptosis in vitro and the molecular pathology of the
tau protein
and amyloid precursor protein (APP). In cultures exposed to mild glutamate toxicity, tau mRNA expression, not beta-actin, is enhanced in stressed neurons. The Guam cycad toxin metabolite methylazoxymethanol also produces an increase of tau gene transcription that exacerbates changes induced by glutamate. In serum-deprived cultures or glutamate-exposed cultures, neurons committed to apoptosis have a reduced tau gene expression, whereas resistant neurons display a stable or even augmented tau mRNA expression accompanied by a persistent tau phosphorylation near serine 202. In the same conditions, stressed neurons produce membrane blebbings strongly immunopositive for APP and putative amyloidogenic fragments that are subsequently released in the extracellular space. Experimental apoptosis in neurons can recapitulate tau and APP modifications that could be associated with a selective vulnerability and a progression of cellular degeneration along the neuronal network.
...
PMID:Toxic neuronal apoptosis and modifications of tau and APP gene and protein expressions. 1046 44
Neuronal degeneration in Alzheimer's disease (AD) has been variously attributed to increases in cytosolic
calcium
, reactive oxygen species, and phosphorylated forms of the
microtubule-associated protein tau
. beta-Amyloid (betaA), which accumulates extracellularly in AD brain, induces
calcium
influx in culture via the L voltage-sensitive calcium channel. Since this channel is normally activated by protein kinase A-mediated phosphorylation, we examined kinase activities recruited following betaA treatment of cortical neurons and SH-SY-5Y neuroblastoma. betaA increased channel phosphorylation; this increase was unaffected by the protein kinase A inhibitor H89 but was reduced by the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase inhibitor PD98059. Pharmacological and antisense oligonucleotide-mediated reduction of MAP kinase activity also reduced betaA-induced accumulation of
calcium
, reactive oxygen species, phospho-tau immunoreactivity, and apoptosis. These findings indicate that MAP kinase mediates multiple aspects of betaA-induced neurotoxicity and indicates that
calcium
influx initiates neurodegeneration in AD. betaA increased MAP kinase-mediated phosphorylation of membrane-associated proteins and reduced phosphorylation of cytosolic proteins without increasing overall MAP kinase activity. Increasing MAP kinase activity with epidermal growth factor did not increase channel phosphorylation. These findings indicate that redirection, rather than increased activation, of MAP kinase activity mediates betaA-induced neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:Activation of the L voltage-sensitive calcium channel by mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase following exposure of neuronal cells to beta-amyloid. MAP kinase mediates beta-amyloid-induced neurodegeneration. 1051 28
Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) is up-regulated in Alzheimer's disease brain and localizes to neurofibrillary tangles with the
tau protein
. Tau is an in vitro tTG substrate, being cross-linked and/or polyaminated. Further, the Gln and Lys residues in tau that are modified by tTG in vitro are located primarily within or adjacent to the microtubule-binding domains. Considering these and other previous findings, this study was carried out to determine if tau is modified in situ by tTG in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells, and whether tTG-catalyzed tau polyamination modulates the function and/or metabolism of tau in vitro. For these studies, SH-SY5Y cells stably overexpressing tTG were used. tTG coimmunoprecipitated with tau, and elevating intracellular
calcium
levels with maitotoxin resulted in a 52 +/- 4% increase in the amount of tTG that coimmunoprecipitated with tau. The increase in association of tTG with tau after treatment with maitotoxin corresponded to a coimmunolocalization of tTG, tTG activity, and tau in the cells. Further, tau was modified by tTG in situ in response to maitotoxin treatment. In vitro polyaminated tau was significantly less susceptible to micro-calpain proteolysis; however, tTG-mediated polyamination of tau did not significantly alter the microtubule-binding capacity of tau. Thus, tau interacts with and is modified by tTG in situ, and modification of tau by tTG alters its metabolism. These data indicate that tau is likely to be modified physiologically and pathophysiologically by tTG, and tTG may play a role in Alzheimer's disease.
...
PMID:Tau is modified by tissue transglutaminase in situ: possible functional and metabolic effects of polyamination. 1053 45
Protein kinase C (PKC) is reversibly activated at the plasma membrane by the generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) coupled with the release of
Ca2+
from intracellular stores. PKC is also irreversibly activated by calpain-mediated PKC cleavage of the regulatory and catalytic subunits; resultant free PKC catalytic subunits are termed "PKM". Unlike PKC, PKM is co-factor-independent, remains active following diffusion away from the membrane, and can theoretically phosphorylate targets inaccessible to, and inappropriate for, PKC. We examined the downstream consequences of PKC activation by the phorbol ester TPA and by ionophore A23187-mediated
calcium
influx (which experimentally correspond to DAG-mediated and calpain-mediated activation, respectively) on phosphorylation of the
microtubule-associated protein tau
. Both methods increased phospho-tau immunoreactivity, and neither was inhibited by lithium or olomoucin (inhibitors of tau kinases GSK-3 beta and cdk5, respectively). The TPA-mediated increase, and not the ionophore-mediated increase, was blocked by co-treatment with the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase inhibitor PD98059. These findings indicate that PKC phosphorylates tau via the MAP kinase pathway, but that PKM can bypass this requirement, therefore demonstrating that distinct intracellular pathways can be mediated by PKC and PKM. PKM generation may therefore trigger one or more additional pathways contributing to tau phosphorylation following inappropriate
calcium
influx.
...
PMID:Free PKC catalytic subunits (PKM) phosphorylate tau via a pathway distinct from that utilized by intact PKC. 1062 66
1. The potential functions of the
microtubule-associated protein tau
have been expanded by the recent demonstration of its interaction with the plasma membrane. Since the association of tau with microtubules is regulated by phosphorylation, herein we examine whether or not the association of tau with the plasma membrane is also regulated by phosphorylation. 2. A range of tau isoforms migrating from 46 to 64 kDa was associated with crude particulate fractions derived from SH-SY-5Y human neuroblastoma cells, and were retained during the initial stages of plasma membrane purification. During the extensive washing utilized in purification of the plasma membrane, portions of each of these isoforms were depleted from the resultant purified membrane. Immunoblot analysis with phospho-dependent and -independent antibodies revealed selective depletion of phospho isoforms during membrane washing. This effect was more pronounced for the slowest-migrating (64-kDa) tau isoform. 3. This putative influence of phosphorylation on the association of tau with the plasma membrane was further probed by transfection of SH-SY-5Y human neuroblastoma cells with a tau construct that could associate with the plasma membrane but not with microtubules. Treatment with phorbol ester or
calcium
ionophore, both of which increased phospho-tau levels within the cytosol and plasma membrane, was accompanied by the dissociation of this tau construct from the membrane. 4. These data indicate that phosphorylation regulates the association with the plasma membrane. Dissociation from the membrane by phosphorylation may place tau at risk for hyperphosphorylation and ultimate PHF formation in a manner previously considered for tau dissociated from microtubules.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of tau alters its association with the plasma membrane. 1090 Dec 69
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.
...
PMID:Apolipoprotein E and beta A4-amyloid: signals and effects. 1144 28
The clinical symptoms of all forms of Alzheimer's disease (AD) result from a slowly progressive neurodegeneration that is associated with the excessive deposition of beta-amyloid (A beta) in plaques and in the cerebrovasculature, and the formation of intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles, which are composed primarily of abnormally hyperphosphorylated
tau protein
. The sequence of cellular events that cause this pathology and neurodegeneration is unknown. It is, however, most probably linked to neuronal signal transduction systems that become misregulated in the brains of certain individuals, causing excessive A beta to be formed and/or deposited, tau to become aggregated and hyperphosphorylated and neurons to degenerate. We hypothesize that a progressive alteration in the ability of neurons to regulate intracellular
calcium
, particularly at the level of the endoplasmic reticulum, is a crucial signal transduction event that is linked strongly to the initiation and development of AD pathology. In this chapter we will discuss the key findings that lend support to this hypothesis.
...
PMID:Dysfunctional intracellular calcium homoeostasis: a central cause of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's disease. 1144 34
To investigate whether the observed association of intracellular neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) proteins with amyloid plaques and neurofibrillar tangles in Alzheimer brains is linked to a possible neuroprotective or neurotoxic activity of the protein, we performed cytotoxicity tests in PC12 cells transfected with the calcium sensor protein VILIP-1 (visinin-like protein) and the
calcium
buffer protein calbindin-D28K. Whereas VILIP-1 expression enhanced the neurotoxic effect of ionomycin already at low ionophore concentrations, calbindin-D28K protected against ionomycin-induced cytotoxicity only at high ionomycin and therefore
calcium
concentrations. However, in double-transfected cells calbindin-D28K rescued VILIP-1-mediated cytotoxicity at low ionomycin concentrations. Since VILIP-1 was found to be associated with fibrillar tangles in Alzheimer brains, we tested whether VILIP-1 has an influence on tau hyperphosphorylation. VILIP-1 expression enhanced hyperphosphorylation of
tau protein
compared to nontransfected or calbindin-D28K-transfected cells. These results raise the possibility that the observed reduction in VILIP-1-expressing cells may indicate a selective vulnerability of these neurons and that the calcium sensor protein is involved in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease. The calcium sensor protein may influence tau phosphorylation and have a role in
calcium
-mediated neurotoxicity opposed to the previously discovered protective effect of
calcium
buffer proteins.
...
PMID:The neuronal calcium sensor protein VILIP-1 is associated with amyloid plaques and extracellular tangles in Alzheimer's disease and promotes cell death and tau phosphorylation in vitro: a link between calcium sensors and Alzheimer's disease? 1159 57
The
calcium
-activated protease calpain cleaves a variety of biologically important proteins and serves, therefore, as a key regulator of many cellular functions. Activation of both main isoforms, calpain 1 and calpain 2, was demonstrated previously in Alzheimer's disease. In this report, antibodies specifically recognizing the active form of calpain 2 were used to investigate calpain 2 activation in a broad range of neurodegenerative diseases, utilizing multiple-label confocal immunofluorescence imaging. With rare exceptions, the active form of calpain 2 was found in colocalization with hyperphosphorylated
tau protein
. Aggregates of mutated huntingtin, alpha-synuclein, or unidentified protein in motor neuron disease type of frontotemporal dementia were always negative. These findings indicate that calpain 2 activation is not a general response to protein aggregation. In tauopathies, more pathological inclusions were labeled for hyperphosphorylated tau than for activated calpain 2. The extent of colocalization varied in both a disease-specific and cell-type specific manner. The active form of calpain 2 was detected in 50-75% of tau neurofibrillary pathology in Alzheimer's disease, Alzheimer neurofibrillary changes and Down's syndrome, as well as in the accompanying Alzheimer-type tau pathology in diffuse Lewy bodies disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, and corticobasal degeneration. For glial cells, only 10-25% of tuft-shaped astrocytes, glial plaques, or coiled bodies contained activated calpain 2. The majority of Pick bodies were negative. The association of calpain 2 activation with hyperphosphorylated tau might be the result of an attempt by the calpain proteolytic system to degrade the
tau protein
aggregates. Alternatively, calpain 2 could be directly involved in tau hyperphosphorylation by modulating protein kinase activities. Overall, these results provide evidence of the important role of the calpain proteolytic system in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases with tau neurofibrillary pathology.
...
PMID:Calpain activation in neurodegenerative diseases: confocal immunofluorescence study with antibodies specifically recognizing the active form of calpain 2. 1207 Jun 70
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is pathologically characterized by deposition of amyloid-beta peptides (Abeta) as senile plaques and by the occurrence of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) composed primarily of hyperphosphorylated
tau protein
. Activation of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) via its potent activator p25 has recently been shown to promote phosphorylation of tau at AD-specific phosphoepitopes, and increased cleavage of p35 to p25 has been demonstrated in AD patients, suggesting that Cdk5 may represent a pathogenic
tau protein
kinase. We were interested in the potential effect of soluble forms of Abeta on Cdk5-mediated AD-like tau phosphorylation, insofar as previous studies of human biopsies and aged canine and primate brains have shown that dystrophic neurites appear before the formation of neuritic plaques. We transfected N2a cells with a p35 vector (N2a/p35 cells) and, after differentiation, challenged these cells with Abeta(1-42) peptide in soluble form (sAbeta(1-42)). Results show that sAbeta(1-42) at relatively low levels (1-5 microM) dose-dependently increases tau phosphorylation at AD-specific phosphoepitopes in differentiated N2a/p35 cells compared with controls, an effect that is blocked by antisense oligonucleotides against p35. sAbeta(1-42)-induced tau phosphorylation is concomitant with an increase in both p25 to p35 ratio and Cdk5 activity (but not protein levels). Additionally, blockade of L-type
calcium
channels or inhibition of calpain completely abolishes this effect. Taken together, these data indicate that sAbeta is a potent activator of the p25/Cdk5 pathway, resulting in promotion of AD-like tau phosphorylation in vitro.
...
PMID:p35/Cdk5 pathway mediates soluble amyloid-beta peptide-induced tau phosphorylation in vitro. 1212 77
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