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Aiding and Abetting, Hyperactive CDK5 Gives Mouse Tangles
21 May 2003. Despite its long and distinguished history in Alzheimer’s research, the microtubule-stabilizing protein tau still poses many a riddle to scientists. They do know that excessive phosphorylation of tau somehow figures in neurodegeneration, yet which kinase enzymes start this process, which ones egg it on, and where along the way the neuron sustains damage are among the questions that still confound them. A paper in today’s Neuron moves the story forward. It introduces a new animal model of tauopathy and proposes that the kinase CDK5, while not the sole instigator, is key to tangle formation and greatly worsens the progression of neurofibrillary pathology, at least in these mice.

Wendy Noble, working with Karen Duff at the Nathan S. Kline Institute of New York University in Orangeburg and colleagues there and elsewhere, crossed mice transgenic for increased CDK5 activity (Ahlijanian et al., 2000) with other transgenics overexpressing the mutant human P301L form of tau (Lewis et al., 2000) that are predisposed to tau pathology. The researchers did that because prior reports have implicated CDK5 activity driven by its cofactor p25 to be elevated in AD, and have shown that CDK5 can phosphorylate tau at sites relevant to AD (see, for example, ARF related news story). Tantalizingly, the CDK5 inhibitor roscovitine reduces tau pathology and neurodegeneration in a mouse model (see ARF related news story). And yet, CDK5 overexpression in mice is insufficient to produce tangles, indicating that other factors are at play (Bian et al., 2002; ARF related news story).

The combined model presented here shows a more pronounced phenotype, Noble and colleagues report. The mice do not have elevated CDK5 expression, but the enzyme’s activity is up roughly twofold. That enhancement came with a marked increase in tau hyperphosphorylation and tau aggregation in the brainstem and in the cortex. The double-transgenics also had more tangles in the brainstem-though no tangles in the cortex-than did the single-transgenic P301L mice, Noble et al. report. (The P301L single-transgenic have no tau pathology in the cortex, the authors point out.) Noble and colleagues also report data on GSK3, another leading suspect among tau-phosphorylating kinases and a drug target (see related news story). Like CDK5, GSK3 also showed increased activity in the double transgenics, and confocal microscopy suggests that both kinases co-localize with tau and even with each other in the cell body and some processes of cultured neurons, Duff’s team writes.

In spite of the intensified neurofibrillary pathology in the brainstem of the double-transgenics, these animals did not suffer an accelerated version of the dystonia seen in the P301T mice, at least by one year of age, the researchers note.

Putting their data in context, the authors propose a sequence of events whereby, once aberrant phosphorylation by CDK5 and/or other kinases has begun, tau proteins no longer bind microtubules, but instead become cytoplasmic and then redistributed away from the axon to the cell body, where they polymerize, fibrillize, and aggregate. During this entire time, tau phosphorylation by GSK3, CDK5, and other kinases may well continue even while tangles are already forming, the authors suggest.

Numerous animal models of tau exist by now, ranging from fly to mouse, from CDK5 to GSK3, from transgenes of mouse tau to human tau, from expression in motor and corticohippocampal neurons to sensory neurons. While this variation makes extrapolation to human tau pathogenesis difficult, the scientists consider compelling their evidence that increased CDK5 activity can promote tangle formation in mice that are predisposed to tauophathy.

How does all this tie in with AD and the amyloid hypothesis? Many researchers think that amyloid can drive tau pathology, perhaps via CDK5 activity. For example, some have proposed that Aβ induces tau hyperphosphorylation, and that the protease calpain-which leads to increased CDK5 activity-is elevated in AD brain (see ARF related news story; Town et al., 2002). P301T mice develop more severe neurofibrillary pathology when crossed with mice producing excess Aβ (see ARF related news story). None of these pathways are proven to occur in human neurodegenerative diseases involving tau, but the cumulative evidence is suggestive enough to explore the use of kinase inhibitors to counteract the progression of neurofibrillary pathology, Duff and colleagues write.-Gabrielle Strobel.

Reference:
Noble W, Olm V, Takata K, Casey E, O M, Meyerson J, Gaynor K, LaFrancois J, Wang L, Kondo T, Davies, P, Burns M, Veeranna, Nixon R, Dickson D, Matsuoka Y, Ahlijnian, Lau LF, Duff K. Cdk5 is a key factor in tau aggregation and tangle formation in vivo. Neuron. 2003 May 22;38(4):555-65. Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Fred Van Leuven (Disclosure)
Submitted 22 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 22 May 2003

The combination of mutant tau-P301L with the CDK5-activating cofactor p25 in brain of double-transgenic mice is proven here to increase phosphorylation of tau and its aggregation into filaments. This outcome is not totally unexpected, and confirms the fact that CDK5 was proposed and identified as tau-kinase II—and GSK3β as tau-kinase I (Ishiguro et al., 1992). This was confirmed by many studies since then, at least in cell culture. Nevertheless, in brain in vivo, the situation was and is more complex, since even overexpression of CDK5 and p35 with human tau-4R in brain of triple-transgenic mice was not sufficient to increase tau-phosphorylation appreciably (Van den Haute et al., 2001) as opposed to GSK3β (Spittaels et al., 2000).

Given the phenotype of the parental transgenic mouse strains, and of other strains as published, comparing them to the current presented double-transgenic strain brings up some interesting questions.

First,...  Read more


  Comment by:  Daniel Geschwind, ARF Advisor
Submitted 23 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 23 May 2003

This paper is very relevant to our work and that of others. It begins to bring together the roles of tau dysregulation and aberrant phosphorylation in a mammalian model. It further demonstrates the role for tau hyperphosphorylation in accelerating NFT pathology.

Although in the discussion it is stated that the other mouse models and fly models are at odds, or inconclusive, they actually are quite in line with these current findings. The one fly model that explores the role of phosphorylation (Jackson et al., 2002) shows that both tau dysregulation and dysregulation of kinase activity (in this case GSK3β, but I suspect CDK5 would be similar) are needed to form NFTs, and that altered kinase activity alone, or wild-type tau overexpression alone, are insufficient. This current paper shows that hyperactive kinase accelerates NFT formation, just as it does in the fly.

Quite importantly, this demonstrates nicely a role for CDK5 in addition to the previously demonstrated role for GSK3β in NFT formation. It also...  Read more


  Comment by:  Akihiko Takashima, ARF Advisor
Submitted 27 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 27 May 2003

Tau aggregation is a central issue for understanding tauopathies, including AD. Crossbreeding CDK5-activator p25 transgenics with P301L transgenics resulted in hyperphosphorylation of human tau and induced tau aggregation in neurons. The correlation between hyperphosphorylation and aggregation of tau is not simple. In utero, tau is highly phosphorylated, but not aggregated. The different phosphorylation sites between fetal tau and PHF tau have been reported and may provide answers regarding which kinases are essential for formation of tau aggregates. Regarding this point, this paper did not satisfy the criteria for phosphorylation sites of PHF-tau, because Serine 202 and 404 of tau are phosphorylated in fetal and PHF tau, although they are phosphorylation sites of CDK5. The phosphorylation of Ser422, Ser262, and AT100 epitopes are specific to PHF tau, but the activation of CDK5 alone cannot explain the phosphorylation of these sites, even in synergistic activation with GSK3. For this reason, it is thought that tau phosphorylation by CDK5 in these mice might not itself induce tau...  Read more

  Comment by:  Sanjay W. Pimplikar
Submitted 27 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 27 May 2003

An interesting observation emanating from the studies of Noble et al. is that the double-transgenic mice overexpressing p25 and mutant tau show an increase in the active form of GSK3β while total GSK3β levels remain unaltered. Although the GSK3β kinase activity was not directly determined in these studies, this observation raises a question: What is the link between elevated p25 levels (which activate CDK5) and the active form of GSK3β? To date, there is no evidence that GSK3β can be directly phosphorylated and activated by CDK5. Nevertheless, these findings suggest that hyperphosphorylation of tau observed in the p25/T double-transgenic animals is likely caused by both kinases. Earlier studies had shown that phosphorylation of tau by CDK5 makes tau a "better" substrate for GSK3β. Thus, these observations suggest two ways by which sustained activation of CDK5 causes hyperphosphorylation of tau: by direct phosphorylation and by activation of GSK3β, which will further phosphorylate tau. Hyperphosphorylated tau is released from microtubules and forms aggregates and tangles leading...  Read more

  Comment by:  Lary Walker, ARF Advisor
Submitted 27 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 27 May 2003

Neurofibrillary tangles consist of tau protein that has forsaken its role as a stabilizer of microtubules to polymerize into abnormal fibrils within neurons. Preclinical and clinical evidence leaves little doubt that abnormal tau polymerization is injurious to neurons. A prominent characteristic of tangles is a high degree of site-specific phosphorylation that is thought to contribute to the dysfunction and polymerization of tau, as well as to the stability of tau filaments. Several kinases are implicated in tau hyperphosphorylation in brain, and one that has garnered attention in Alzheimer's pathogenesis is cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (CDK5). There is evidence in AD that CDK5 is overactivated by an excess of a protein fragment called p25; the resulting increase in phosphorylation is hypothesized to facilitate tau polymerization and tangle formation.

Transgenic mice are ideal for testing such hypotheses in vivo. Mice overexpressing p25 develop axonopathy and movement dysfunction, but the neurons show no evidence of neurofibrillary tangles (Ahlijanian et al., 2000; Bian et al.,...  Read more


  Primary Papers: Cdk5 is a key factor in tau aggregation and tangle formation in vivo.

Comment by:  Andre Delacourte, ARF Advisor
Submitted 28 May 2003  |  Permalink Posted 30 May 2003
  I recommend this paper
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