4.6 Article

The jaws of the Tau-microtubule interaction

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 282, Issue 16, Pages 12230-12239

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M607159200

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Tau is the major microtubule-associated protein in neuronal axons. It aggregates into neurofibrillary tangles during the course of Alzheimer disease. Binding to microtubules and microtubule assembly requires the repeat domain in the C-terminal half of Tau, as well as the two regions flanking the repeats. Here we report the NMR characterization of a 198-residue Tau fragment composed of the four tandem repeats and the flanking domains and containing the full microtubule binding and assembly activity of Tau. NMR secondary chemical shifts and dipolar couplings detect the highest propensity for beta-structure within the four-repeat region, whereas the flanking domains are largely random coil, with an increased rigidity in the proline-rich region. Chemical shift perturbation experiments identify two motifs in the upstream flanking domain, (225)KVAVVRT(231) and (243)LQTA(246), and one downstream of the repeats, (KIETHKTFREN380)-K-370, which strongly contribute to the binding to the acidic outside of microtubules, as well as to the binding of other polyanions such as heparin. This is consistent with the jaws model of Tau-microtubule interactions and highlights the importance of the regions flanking the repeats for both microtubule binding and pathological Tau aggregation.

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