Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Seed-competent tau monomer initiates pathology in a tauopathy mouse model

39

Citations

29

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Tau aggregation into ordered assemblies causes neurodegenerative tauopathies. We previously reported that tau monomer exists in either inert (M<sub>i</sub>) or seed-competent (M<sub>s</sub>) conformational ensembles and that M<sub>s</sub> encodes strains, that is, unique, self-replicating, biologically active assemblies. It is unknown if disease begins with M<sub>s</sub> formation followed by fibril assembly or if M<sub>s</sub> derives from fibrils and is therefore an epiphenomenon. Here, we studied a tauopathy mouse model (PS19) that expresses full-length mutant human (1N4R) tau (P301S). Insoluble tau seeding activity appeared at 2 months of age and insoluble tau protein assemblies by immunoblot at 3 months. Tau monomer from mice aged 1 to 6 weeks, purified using size-exclusion chromatography, contained soluble seeding activity at 4 weeks, before insoluble material or larger assemblies were observed, with assemblies ranging from n = 1 to 3 tau units. By 5 to 6 weeks, large soluble assemblies had formed. This indicated that the first detectable pathological forms of tau were in fact M<sub>s</sub>. We next examined posttranslational modifications of tau monomer from 1 to 6 weeks. We detected no phosphorylation unique to M<sub>s</sub> in PS19 or human Alzheimer's disease brains. We conclude that tauopathy begins with formation of the M<sub>s</sub> monomer, whose activity is phosphorylation independent. M<sub>s</sub> then self assembles to form oligomers before it forms insoluble fibrils. The conversion of tau monomer from M<sub>i</sub> to M<sub>s</sub> thus constitutes the first detectable step in the initiation of tauopathy in this mouse model, with obvious implications for the origins of tauopathy in humans.

References

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