Scientists have now shown how a critical factor in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, a protein called tau, turns from normal to a disease state – and demonstrates how this discovery could provide a new target for treatment.

Scientists Uncover One of the Driving Forces of Alzheimer’s Disease – New Target for Treatment

New research explored how a protein called tau, critical to Alzheimer’s, turns from normal to a diseased state. This discovery presents a new target to potentially prevent or treat this debilitating progressive illness that slowly destroys cognitive function and memory. Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia in older adults and the 7th leading cause of death in the United States, according to the National Institute on Aging. Alzheimer’s disease, the most prevalent form of dementia, currently has no cure or effective therapy, in part due to gaps in our understanding of how the progressive neurodegenerative disorder emerges in the brain.

Now, new research from Flinders University has demonstrated how a protein called tau, which is a critical factor in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, turns from normal to a disease state. Furthermore, the study reveals how this discovery could deliver a therapeutic target. Published on July 6, 2022, in the journal Science Advances, the team’s findings provide hope for preventing the tau transformation process from happening, thereby maintaining tau in a healthy state and avoiding damaging consequences on brain cells. “Alongside a small peptide called amyloid-beta, the tau protein is a central factor in Alzheimer’s disease. Tau is necessary for the toxic effects on brain cells that then result in impaired memory function,” says senior study author Dr. Arne Ittner, Senior Research Fellow in Neuroscience in the Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute.

Tau accumulates in deposits inside brain cells as Alzheimer’s disease progresses. Tau is highly transformed throughout this process, with various deposits made up of tau bearing multiple minor modifications at many different positions within the tau molecule. While neuropathologists have known about these changes to tau for decades, it remained unclear how tau arrives at this multi-modified stage. The new research has solved part of this mystery and provides a new mechanism to explain how tau gets progressively modified. The study set out to answer whether one change at one specific spot in tau would make it easier for another spot to be modified. The team focussed on the relationship between tau and protein kinases, which are enzymes that introduce changes in tau.

“Usually, protein kinases target specific spots, called phosphorylation sites, in tau and other proteins, and introduce changes only at these specific spots,” says study lead author Dr. Kristie Stefanoska, Research Fellow in Dementia at Flinders University. “However, we suspected that some of these enzymes are able to target several spots in tau and would do so even more efficiently if tau were already modified at one spot to begin with.” The researchers conducted a large experiment that included up to 20 different changes in tau and 12 enzymes, focussing on the most abundant type of change seen in tau from the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. While the study did discover that one change in tau does makes it easier for another change to be introduced, it was also able to identify “master sites” in tau, being specific spots that govern subsequent modifications at most of the other sites.

Source: This news is originally published by scitechdaily

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