Wyatt C Powell, McKinley Nahum, Karl Pankratz, Morgane Herlory, James Greenwood, Darya Poliyenko, Patrick Holland, Ruiheng Jing, Luke Biggerstaff, Michael H B Stowell, Maciej A Walczak
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The self-assembly of Tau into filaments, which mirror the structures observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains, raises questions about the role of AD-specific post-translational modifications (PTMs) in the formation of paired helical filaments (PHFs). To investigate this, we developed a synthetic approach to produce Tau(291-391) featuring N-acetyllysine, phosphoserine, phosphotyrosine, and N-glycosylation at positions commonly modified in post-mortem AD brains. Using various electron and optical microscopy techniques, we discovered that these modifications generally hinder the in vitro assembly of Tau into PHFs. Interestingly, while acetylation's effect on Tau assembly displayed variability, either promoting or inhibiting phase transitions in cofactor-free aggregation, heparin-induced aggregation, and RNA-mediated liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), phosphorylation uniformly mitigated these processes. Our observations suggest that PTMs, particularly those situated outside the rigid core, are pivotal in the nucleation of PHFs. Moreover, with heparin-induced aggregation leading to the formation of heterogeneous aggregates, most AD-specific PTMs appeared to decelerate aggregation. The impact of acetylation on RNA-induced LLPS was notably site-dependent, whereas phosphorylation consistently reduced LLPS across all proteoforms examined. These insights underscore the complex interplay between site-specific PTMs and environmental factors in modulating Tau aggregation kinetics, highlighting the role of PTMs located outside the ordered filament core in driving the self-assembly.
期刊介绍:
ACS Central Science publishes significant primary reports on research in chemistry and allied fields where chemical approaches are pivotal. As the first fully open-access journal by the American Chemical Society, it covers compelling and important contributions to the broad chemistry and scientific community. "Central science," a term popularized nearly 40 years ago, emphasizes chemistry's central role in connecting physical and life sciences, and fundamental sciences with applied disciplines like medicine and engineering. The journal focuses on exceptional quality articles, addressing advances in fundamental chemistry and interdisciplinary research.