AI Article Synopsis

  • The protein tau is crucial for the nervous system's health, but when it malfunctions, it leads to diseases known as tauopathies, characterized by tau aggregation.
  • A study investigates a specific fragment of tau, (273)GKVQIINKKLDL(284), focusing on its early aggregation stages using various experimental and simulation techniques.
  • Results show that a mutation (K280 deletion) and the presence of heparin alter the peptide's structure, enhancing aggregation and potentially contributing to neurodegenerative diseases.

Article Abstract

The microtubule associated protein tau is essential for the development and maintenance of the nervous system. Tau dysfunction is associated with a class of diseases called tauopathies, in which tau is found in an aggregated form. This paper focuses on a small aggregating fragment of tau, (273)GKVQIINKKLDL(284), encompassing the (PHF6*) region that plays a central role in tau aggregation. Using a combination of simulations and experiments, we probe the self-assembly of this peptide, with an emphasis on characterizing the early steps of aggregation. Ion-mobility mass spectrometry experiments provide a size distribution of early oligomers, TEM studies provide a time course of aggregation, and enhanced sampling molecular dynamics simulations provide atomistically detailed structural information about this intrinsically disordered peptide. Our studies indicate that a point mutation, as well the addition of heparin, lead to a shift in the conformations populated by the earliest oligomers, affecting the kinetics of subsequent fibril formation as well as the morphology of the resulting aggregates. In particular, a mutant associated with a K280 deletion (a mutation that causes a heritable form of neurodegeneration/dementia in the context of full length tau) is seen to aggregate more readily than its wild-type counterpart. Simulations and experiment reveal that the ΔK280 mutant peptide adopts extended conformations to a greater extent than the wild-type peptide, facilitating aggregation through the pre-structuring of the peptide into a fibril-competent structure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3663921PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c3cp00063jDOI Listing

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