Hyperphosphorylated tau self-assembles into amorphous aggregates eliciting TLR4-dependent responses

Author:

Meng Jonathan X.ORCID,Zhang Yu,Saman DominikORCID,Haider Arshad M.,De SumanORCID,Sang Jason C.,Brown Karen,Jiang Kun,Humphrey JaneORCID,Julian Linda,Hidari EricORCID,Lee Steven F.ORCID,Balmus GabrielORCID,Floto R. AndresORCID,Bryant Clare E.ORCID,Benesch Justin L. P.ORCID,Ye YuORCID,Klenerman DavidORCID

Abstract

AbstractSoluble aggregates of the microtubule-associated protein tau have been challenging to assemble and characterize, despite their important role in the development of tauopathies. We found that sequential hyperphosphorylation by protein kinase A in conjugation with either glycogen synthase kinase 3β or stress activated protein kinase 4 enabled recombinant wild-type tau of isoform 0N4R to spontaneously polymerize into small amorphous aggregates in vitro. We employed tandem mass spectrometry to determine the phosphorylation sites, high-resolution native mass spectrometry to measure the degree of phosphorylation, and super-resolution microscopy and electron microscopy to characterize the morphology of aggregates formed. Functionally, compared with the unmodified aggregates, which require heparin induction to assemble, these self-assembled hyperphosphorylated tau aggregates more efficiently disrupt membrane bilayers and induce Toll-like receptor 4-dependent responses in human macrophages. Together, our results demonstrate that hyperphosphorylated tau aggregates are potentially damaging to cells, suggesting a mechanism for how hyperphosphorylation could drive neuroinflammation in tauopathies.

Funder

Royal Society

RCUK | Medical Research Council

Alzheimer's Society

Alzheimer's Research UK

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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