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Dangerous Liaisons—Tau and Aβ, Together at Last?
27 January 2006. They are no match made in heaven, but in neurons, the two proteins responsible for amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles—amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau—might interact temporarily. So conclude Pat McGeer and colleagues in an advanced online publication in this week’s PNAS. They report that Aβ and tau bind to each other with considerable avidity in vitro, and that the liaison promotes phosphorylation of tau.

Though plaques and tangles are the major hallmarks of AD, establishing a solid link between them has been difficult. While mutations that lead to increased production of Aβ cause AD, tau mutations that promote neurofibrillary tangles cause a different form of disease, frontotemporal dementia. This suggests that the two proteins move in distinct circles. And yet there are also reports that these circles may overlap at times. Recent evidence that the two proteins conspire pathologically has come from Frank LaFerla’s lab at the University of California, Irvine. His work has shown that antibodies that mop up Aβ also reduce neurofibrillary tangles (see ARF related news story and Oddo et al., 2006). Other evidence also points to common pathways involving microtubule trafficking (see ARF related news story) and signal transduction through the Cdk5 (see ARF related news story), GSK3 (see ARF related news story), and Akt kinases (see ARF related news story). But if confirmed, the finding by McGeer and colleagues at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and at the Tokyo Institute of Psychiatry, Japan, could put some icing on the Aβ/tau cake.

First author Jian-Ping Guo and colleagues used simple Western blots to show that tau and Aβ formed complexes in vitro that survive detergent (SDS) and boiling. When Aβ40 or Aβ42 was added to recombinant, full-length tau, the complexes could be detected with either tau (tau 12, recognizing both phosphorylated and unphosphorylated protein) or Aβ (4G8, which detects either Aβ40 or Aβ42) antibodies. Furthermore, adding Aβ to the mix stimulated phosphorylation of tau by GSK3β, an indication that Aβ might directly promote the formation of neurofibrillary tangles in vivo (see also ARF SfN news story).

To hone in on the tau-Aβ binding site, the authors incubated Aβ with membrane-bound tau peptides and vice versa. This revealed that binding occurs between exons 7 and 9 of tau and the mid to C-terminal end of Aβ. These tau exons harbor threonine 212 and serines 214, 356, and 396, all subject to phosphorylation. Indeed, Guo showed that phosphorylation at T212 completely eliminates Aβ binding. Coupled with Aβ’s ability to enhance phosphorylation of tau, this suggests that the relationship between the two proteins may be short-lived because Aβ would probably change tau and drive the pair apart.

The paper does not answer the question of whether the two proteins interact in this fashion in vivo. Because Aβ is cleaved from its precursor protein (AβPP) on the luminal side of vesicles or extracellularly in the case of the cell membrane, it is not obvious how the two proteins meet. Several labs have detected intraneuronal Aβ deposits (see ARF related conference story and ARF conference story), and Guo and colleagues detected Aβ/tau complexes in brain tissue samples using an ELISA test that employed a tau antibody for capture and an Aβ antibody for detection; the signal from AD brain tissue was slightly higher than normal. They also report some data for colocalization of Aβ and tau in human neurofibrillary tangles in neurons of the entorhinal cortex. Guo et al. hypothesize that “an initial step in the pathogenesis [of AD] may be the intracellular binding of soluble Aβ to soluble non-phosphorylated tau, thus promoting tau phosphorylation and Aβ nucleation.” If true, then preventing this marriage could, in one fell swoop, prevent both neurofibrillary tangles and amyloid plaques.—Tom Fagan.

Reference:
Guo J-P, Arai T, Miklossy J, McGeer PL. Aβ and tau form soluble complexes that may promote self-aggregation of both into the insoluble forms observed in Alzheimer’s disease. PNAS. January 26, 2006; early online edition. Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Gerd Multhaup
Submitted 27 January 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 January 2006

Guo et al. have found that tau and amyloid-β can interact in vitro. The authors used a mix of full-length recombinant tau and synthetic Aβ40 or Aβ42 to show that SDS-stable complexes are formed between tau and Aβ peptides after 5 hours' incubation time. Phosphorylation of tau by GSK3β weakened the interaction. A synthetic peptide spot array revealed three presumed binding sites for recombinant tau within the Aβ sequence, Aβ11-16, Aβ27-32 and Aβ37-42. The N-terminal site has a histidine residue at position 13 that is not conserved in rodents. The other two candidate sites are localized to the C-terminal region of Aβ, which adopts a β-sheet conformation before or during the aggregation of Aβ into amyloid.

Surprisingly, immunostaining of tau and Aβ revealed a colocalization of tau and Aβ with varying degrees. I would expect Aβ to be associated with vesicular compartments and tau being associated with the cytoskeleton. So far, we do not know if the staining exclusively reflects Aβ staining, since the antibody 4G8’s epitope is also found in β-stubs. Also, a release of soluble...  Read more


  Comment by:  Massimo Tabaton
Submitted 27 January 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 January 2006

Patrick McGeer and colleagues showed that the Aβ species form SDS-resistant complexes with tau protein in vitro, and the binding promotes tau phosphorylation. Hence, they suggest, the intraneuronal interaction between Aβ and tau is crucial for the formation of neurofibrillary tangles.

This conclusion would be more strongly supported by the demonstration of Aβ/tau complexes with immunoblotting in soluble fractions of AD brain. In addition, the immunocytochemistry is not convincing. We showed with immunoEM that Aβ and tau are associated only in the "ghost," extracellular tangles (Tabaton et al., 1991). In this case, the association reflects a "nucleation effect" of the core of PHF-tau on the soluble Aβ. Therefore, the association does not have a functional role in PHF formation. In the present paper, the authors do not convince that Aβ and tau coreactivity occurs intracellularly.

View all comments by Massimo Tabaton


  Comment by:  Jurgen Goetz, ARF Advisor
Submitted 27 January 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 January 2006

The identification in this paper of a complex formation between Aβ and tau by Patrick McGeer’s group (Aβ and tau form soluble complexes that may promote self-aggregation of both into the insoluble forms observed in Alzheimer disease) by Western blotting, surface plasmon resonance, and ELISA, is a fascinating piece of work. I like in particular the data obtained with the peptide array of 214 peptide spots covering the entire tau sequence and with 11 specific peptides, with or without phosphorylated serine and threonine. Not surprisingly, phosphorylation of the “physiological” AT8 epitope S202/T205 of tau does not interfere with Aβ binding, whereas phosphorylation of the “pathological” epitopes T212/S214 (AT100) and S422, among others, does.

In light of the co-occurrence of Aβ plaques and Lewy bodies in a range of dementing disorders, it would be very interesting to determine in a follow-up study the interaction of α-synuclein and Aβ. If affinities there are much lower than for tau/Aβ, it may also partly explain why plaques and NFTs co-occur more often than plaques and Lewy...  Read more


  Comment by:  John Trojanowski, ARF Advisor
Submitted 27 January 2006  |  Permalink Posted 27 January 2006

Guo et al. address a longstanding enigma about the signature lesions of AD, that is, the senile plaques (SPs) formed by extracellular deposits of Aβ amyloid fibrils and the neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) formed by intraneuronal accumulations of tau amyloid fibrils known as PHFs or PHFtau.

Despite an abundance of hypotheses to account for how Aβ fibrils may cause formation of PHFtau and NFTs, or how PHFtau might induce formation of Aβ-rich SPs, there is little experimental data to support the predictions of these hypotheses. Circumstantial evidence from studies of sporadic and familial AD has been interpreted to imply that Aβ amyloid causes tau amyloidosis and NFTs in AD, and yet studies of Guam tauopathies and Niemann Pick Type C disease (NPC) lend support to the notion that the accumulation of SPs results from the earlier accumulation of NFTs in these diseases. However, there is little experimental evidence to support inferences based on these and other types of circumstantial evidence.

Indeed, most transgenic mice engineered to overexpress human Aβ develop SPs but not...  Read more


  Comment by:  Nikolaos K. Robakis
Submitted 31 January 2006  |  Permalink Posted 31 January 2006

The concept of this study could be important, as it may offer an explanation for tau overphosphorylation in AD. On the other hand, it is not clear how this theory explains the independent distribution of the amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the AD (or even normal) brain, or the fact that NFTs can form in the absence of Aβ deposition. Also, since soluble Aβ is found in all people and all brains (and thus far solid evidence for a specific increase in any form of a soluble Aβ in sporadic AD is lacking), what keeps soluble Aβ from catalyzing tau overphosphorylation in normal brains?

View all comments by Nikolaos K. Robakis

  Comment by:  P.L. McGeer
Submitted 6 February 2006  |  Permalink Posted 6 February 2006

Reply by Pat McGeer to commentary above
John Trojanowski, Juergen Goetz, Gerd Multhaup, Massimo Tabaton, and Nikolaos Robakis have each made thoughtful and pertinent comments about our paper.

Our demonstration of a strong interaction between Aβ and tau is such a simple and easily replicable experiment that it may seem strange that it was not identified long ago. We suggest the reason is the widespread acceptance of the standard APP-Aβ model. It hypothesizes that Aβ is produced at the cell surface and then secreted into the extracellular fluid. Even the names given to the enzymes responsible for Aβ production reinforce this concept: α-secretase, β-secretase, and γ-secretase.

But intraneuronal production of Aβ also occurs. There is a rich but overlooked literature on this subject. We hope our paper will draw attention to that literature, as well as stimulate productive new experiments involving intraneuronal Aβ. We did not cover papers involving transgenic mice, but a report of particular interest is that of Billings...  Read more


  Primary Papers: Abeta and tau form soluble complexes that may promote self aggregation of both into the insoluble forms observed in Alzheimer's disease.

Comment by:  Hyoung-gon Lee, George Perry, ARF Advisor (Disclosure), Mark A. Smith (Disclosure), Xiongwei Zhu
Submitted 15 February 2006  |  Permalink Posted 15 February 2006

Tau-Amyloid Interactions: A Timely Revival?
The long-awaited direct connection between amyloid-β and tau may have finally arrived with the publication of this paper. The question is, given the experimental simplicity, why did it take so long? The simple answer is that it did not. Certainly, it was well established by three groups (Smith et al., 1995; Giaccone et al., 1996; Islam and Levy, 1997) that amyloid-β precursor protein (AβPP) is able to interact with tau and that this promoted fibril formation. Earlier still, it was established that amyloid-β (and, in fact, the entire AβPP protein) was associated with intraneuronal (Hyman et al., 1989; Allsop et al., 1990; Perry et al., 1992; Perry et al., 1993) and extracellular neurofibrillary tangles (Smith et al., 1990; Tabaton et al., 1991), leading one of us to the “outrageous” (at the time) conclusion that neurofibrillary tangles were the nucleation point for senile plaques (Perry, 1993).

The difference? Earlier reports were perhaps not published in such a high-profile journal, perhaps not so elegantly direct and,...  Read more

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