A pathological phosphorylation pattern enhances tau cooperativity on microtubules and facilitates tau filament assembly

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Abstract

Phosphorylation plays a crucial role in both normal and disease processes involving the microtubule-associated protein tau. Physiologically, phosphorylation regulates tau's subcellular localization within neurons and is involved in fetal development and animal hibernation. However, abnormal phosphorylation of tau is linked to the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in various human tauopathies. Interestingly, the patterns of tau phosphorylation are similar in both normal and abnormal processes, leaving unclear whether phosphorylated tau retains its functional role in normal processes. The relationship between tau phosphorylation and NFT assembly in tauopathies is also still debated. To address these questions, we investigated the effects of tau phosphorylation on microtubule binding, cooperative protein envelope formation, and NFT filament assembly relevant to tauopathies. Consistent with previous results, our findings show that tau phosphorylation decreases tau's overall affinity for microtubules, but we reveal that phosphorylation more dramatically impacts the cooperativity between tau molecules during tau envelope formation along microtubules. Additionally, we observed that the specific pattern of phosphorylation, rather than overall phosphorylation level, strongly impacts the assembly of tau filaments in vitro. Our results reveal new insights into how tau phosphorylation impacts tau’s physiological roles on microtubules and its pathoconversion into NFTs.

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