Microtubule‐affinity regulating kinase family members distinctively affect tau phosphorylation and promote its toxicity in a Drosophila model

Author:

Sultanakhmetov Grigorii1,Kato Iori1,Asada Akiko12,Saito Taro12,Ando Kanae12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences Graduate School of Science, Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science Tokyo Metropolitan University Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractAccumulation of abnormally phosphorylated tau and its aggregation constitute a significant hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Tau phosphorylation at Ser262 and Ser356 in the KXGS motifs of microtubule‐binding repeats plays a critical role in its physiological function and AD disease progression. Major tau kinases to phosphorylate tau at Ser262 and Ser356 belong to the Microtubule Affinity Regulating Kinase family (MARK1‐4), which are considered one of the major contributors to tau abnormalities in AD. However, whether and how each member affects tau toxicity in vivo is unclear. We used transgenic Drosophila as a model to compare the effect on tau‐induced neurodegeneration among MARKs in vivo. MARK4 specifically promotes tau accumulation and Ser396 phosphorylation, which yields more tau toxicity than was caused by other MARKs. Interestingly, MARK1, 2, and 4 increased tau phosphorylation at Ser262 and Ser356, but only MARK4 caused tau accumulation, indicating that these sites alone did not cause pathological tau accumulation. Our results revealed MARKs are different in their effect on tau toxicity, and also in tau phosphorylation at pathological sites other than Ser262 and Ser356. Understanding the implementation of each MARK into neurodegenerative disease helps to develop more target and safety therapies to overcome AD and related tauopathies.

Funder

Takeda Science Foundation

Japan Science and Technology Agency

NOVARTIS Foundation (Japan) for the Promotion of Science

Tokyo Metropolitan University

Publisher

Wiley

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