학술논문

Three‐repeat and four‐repeat tau isoforms form different oligomers
Document Type
article
Source
Protein Science. 31(3)
Subject
Neurosciences
Aging
Alzheimer's Disease
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD)
Neurodegenerative
Dementia
Brain Disorders
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Aetiology
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Antibodies
Brain
Humans
Protein Isoforms
Tauopathies
tau Proteins
inhibitor
oligomerization
tau isoforms
tauopathies
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Computation Theory and Mathematics
Other Information and Computing Sciences
Biophysics
Language
Abstract
Different tauopathies are characterized by the isoform-specific composition of the aggregates found in the brain and by structurally distinct tau strains. Although tau oligomers have been implicated as important neurotoxic species, little is known about how the primary structures of the six human tau isoforms affect tau oligomerization because the oligomers are metastable and difficult to analyze. To address this knowledge gap, here, we analyzed the initial oligomers formed by the six tau isoforms in the absence of posttranslational modifications or other manipulations using dot blots probed by an oligomer-specific antibody, native-PAGE/western blots, photo-induced cross-linking of unmodified proteins, mass-spectrometry, and ion-mobility spectroscopy. We found that under these conditions, three-repeat (3R) isoforms are more prone than four-repeat (4R) isoforms to form oligomers. We also tested whether known inhibitors of tau aggregation affect its oligomerization using three small molecules representing different classes of tau aggregation inhibitors, Methylene Blue (MB), the molecular tweezer CLR01, and the all-D peptide TLKIVW, for their ability to inhibit or modulate the oligomerization of the six tau isoforms. Unlike their reported inhibitory effect on tau fibrillation, the inhibitors had little or no effect on the initial oligomerization. Our study provides novel insight into the primary-quaternary structure relationship of human tau and suggests that 3R-tau oligomers may be an important target for future development of compounds targeting pathological tau assemblies.