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Tau in MAPK activation

Authors :
Chad J. Leugers
Ju Yong Koh
Gloria Lee
Willis Hong
Source :
Frontiers in Neurology, Vol 4 (2013), Frontiers in Neurology
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2013.

Abstract

The nature of “toxic” tau in Alzheimer’s disease has been unclear. During pathogenesis, the importance of tau oligomerization versus tau phosphorylation is controversial and the investigation of both remains critical towards defining the “toxicity” of tau. The phosphorylation of tau on serines and/or threonines occurs early in the disease course and altering phosphorylation has been shown to disrupt neuropathogenesis. We have recently reported that in PC12-derived cells, tau had a role in signal transduction processes activated by NGF. By depleting tau, NGF-induced MAPK activation was attenuated and by restoring tau, MAPK activation was restored. Furthermore, the phosphorylation of tau on thr231 was required for tau to potentiate MAPK activation. Here we report the effects of additional disease-related tau phosphorylation sites and tau isoform on the ability of tau to potentiate MAPK activation. Our findings, which tested three other sites of phosphorylation, showed that phosphorylation at these other sites mainly lessened MAPK activation; none potentiated MAPK activation. In comparing 0N3R tau to the other five brain tau isoforms, most showed a trend towards less MAPK activation, with only 2N4R tau showing significantly less activation. Since MAPK activation has been reported in Alzheimer’s disease brain and is characteristic of cell proliferation mechanisms, tau phosphorylation that promotes MAPK activation could promote cell cycle activation mechanisms. In neurons, the activation of the cell cycle leads to cell death, suggesting that abnormally phosphorylated tau can be a toxic species. The relationship between tau oligomerization and its ability to potentiate MAPK activation needs to be determined.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16642295
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f3292b7c2f5bc92f77df1c32f7644a46
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2013.00161/full