Alzheimer's disease is defined in part by the intraneuronal accumulation of filaments comprised of the microtubule-associated protein tau. In vitro, fibrillization of recombinant tau can be induced by treatment with various agents, including phosphotransferases, polyanionic compounds, and fatty acids. Here we characterize the structural features required for the fatty acid class of tau fibrillization inducer using recombinant fulllength tau protein, arachidonic acid, and a series of straight chain anionic, cationic, and nonionic detergents. Induction of measurable tau fibrillization required an alkyl chain length of at least 12 carbons and a negative charge consisting of carboxylate, sulfonate, or sulfate moieties. All detergents and fatty acids were micellar at active concentrations, due to a profound, taudependent depression of their critical micelle concentrations. Anionic surfaces larger than detergent micelles, such as those supplied by phosphatidylserine vesicles, also induced tau fibrillization with resultant filaments originating from their surface. These data suggest that anionic surfaces presented as micelles or vesicles can serve to nucleate tau fibrillization, that this mechanism underlies the activity of fatty acid inducers, and that anionic membranes may serve this function in vivo.
Parkinson's disease is characterized by the aggregation of ␣-synuclein into filamentous forms within affected neurons of the basal ganglia. Fibrillization of purified recombinant ␣-synuclein is inefficient in vitro but can be enhanced by the addition of various agents including glycosaminoglycans and polycations. Here we report that fatty acids and structurally related anionic detergents greatly accelerate fibrillization of recombinant ␣-synuclein at low micromolar concentrations with lag times as short as 11 min and apparent first order growth rate constants as fast as 10.4 h ؊1 . All detergents and fatty acids were micellar at active concentrations because of an ␣-synuclein-dependent depression of their critical micelle concentrations. Other anionic surfaces, such as those supplied by anionic phospholipid vesicles, also induced ␣-synuclein fibrillization, with resultant filaments originating from their surface. These data suggest that anionic surfaces presented as micelles or vesicles can serve to nucleate ␣-synuclein fibrillization, that this mechanism underlies the inducer activity of anionic surfactants, and that anionic membranes may serve this function in vivo.
Alzheimer's disease is characterized in part by the accumulation of full-length tau proteins into intracellular filamentous inclusions. To clarify the events that trigger lesion formation, the aggregation of recombinant full-length four-repeat tau (htau40) was examined in vitro under near-physiological conditions using transmission electron microscopy and spectroscopy methods. In the absence of exogenous inducers, tau protein behaved as an assembly-incompetent monomer with little tertiary structure. The addition of anionic inducers led to fibrillization with nucleation-dependent kinetics. On the basis of circular dichroism spectroscopy and reactivity with thioflavin S and 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonic acid fluorescent probes, the inducer stabilized a monomeric species with the folding characteristics of a premolten globule state. Planar aromatic dyes capable of binding the intermediate state with high affinity were also capable of triggering fibrillization in the absence of other inducers. Dye-mediated aggregation was characterized by concentration-dependent decreases in lag time, indicating increased nucleation rates, and submicromolar critical concentrations, indicating a final equilibrium that favored the filamentous state. The data suggest that the rate-limiting barrier for filament formation from full-length tau is conformational and that the aggregation reaction is triggered by environmental conditions that stabilize assembly-competent conformations.
Alzheimer's disease is defined in part by the intraneuronal accumulation of filaments comprised of the microtubule-associated protein tau. In vitro, fibrillization of full-length, unphosphorylated recombinant tau can be induced under near-physiological conditions by treatment with various agents, including anionic surfactants. Here we examine the pathway through which anionic surfactants promote tau fibrillization using a combination of electron microscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy. Protein and surfactant first interacted in solution to form micelles, which then provided negatively charged surfaces that accumulated tau aggregates. Surface aggregation of tau protein was followed by the time-dependent appearance of a thioflavin S reactive intermediate that accumulated over a period of hours. The intermediate was unstable in the absence of anionic surfaces, suggesting it was not filamentous. Fibrillization proceeded after intermediate formation with classic nucleation-dependent kinetics, consisting of lag phase followed by the exponential increase in filament lengths, followed by an equilibrium phase reached in approximately 24 h. The pathway did not require protein insertion into the micelle hydrophobic core or conformational change arising from mixed micelle formation, because anionic microspheres constructed from impermeable polystyrene were capable of qualitatively reproducing all aspects of the fibrillization reaction. It is proposed that the progression from amorphous aggregation through intermediate formation and fibrillization may underlie the activity of other inducers such as hyperphosphorylation and may be operative in vivo.
Alzheimer's disease is defined in part by the intraneuronal accumulation of filaments comprised of the microtubule associated protein tau. Because animal model studies suggest that a toxic gain of function accompanies tau aggregation in neurons, selective pharmacological inhibitors of the process may have utility in slowing neurodegeneration. Here, the properties of a candidate small molecule inhibitor of tau fibrillization, 3-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2-[2-[[3-(2-hydroxyethyl)-5-methoxy-2-benzothiazolylidene]methyl]-1-butenyl]-5-methoxybenzothiazolium (N744), were characterized in vitro using transmission electron microscopy. N744 inhibited arachidonic acid-induced aggregation of full-length, four-repeat tau protein at substoichiometric concentrations relative to total tau and with an IC(50) of approximately 300 nM. Inhibition was accompanied by a dose-dependent decrease in the number concentration of filaments, suggesting that N744 interfered with tau filament nucleation. Stoichiometric concentrations of N744 also promoted tau disaggregation when added to mature synthetic filaments. Disaggregation followed first-order kinetics and was accompanied by a steady decrease in filament number, suggesting that N744 promoted endwise loss of tau molecules with limited filament breakage. N744 at substoichiometric concentrations did not inhibit Abeta and alpha-synuclein aggregation, indicating it was tau selective under these conditions. Because of its activity in vitro, N744 may offer a pharmacological approach to the role of tau fibrillization in neurodegeneration.
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