Proapoptotic effects of tau cleavage product generated by caspase-3

CW Chung, YH Song, IK Kim, WJ Yoon, BR Ryu… - Neurobiology of …, 2001 - Elsevier
CW Chung, YH Song, IK Kim, WJ Yoon, BR Ryu, DG Jo, HN Woo, YK Kwon, HH Kim…
Neurobiology of disease, 2001Elsevier
Using an in vitro translation assay to screen a human brain cDNA library, we isolated the
microtubule-associated protein Tau and determined it to be a caspase-3 substrate whose C-
terminal cleavage occurred during neuronal apoptosis. ΔTau, the 50-kDa cleavage product,
was detected by Western blot in apoptotic cortical cells probed with anti-PHF-1 and anti-Tau-
5 antibodies, but not anti-T-46 antibody which recognizes the C-terminus. Overexpression of
ΔTau in SK-N-BE2 (C) cells significantly increased the incidence of cell death …
Using an in vitro translation assay to screen a human brain cDNA library, we isolated the microtubule-associated protein Tau and determined it to be a caspase-3 substrate whose C-terminal cleavage occurred during neuronal apoptosis. ΔTau, the 50-kDa cleavage product, was detected by Western blot in apoptotic cortical cells probed with anti-PHF-1 and anti-Tau-5 antibodies, but not anti-T-46 antibody which recognizes the C-terminus. Overexpression of ΔTau in SK-N-BE2(C) cells significantly increased the incidence of cell death. Staurosporine-induced Tau cleavage was blocked by 20 μM z-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-chloromethylketone, a caspase-3 inhibitor, and in vitro, Tau was selectively cleaved by caspase-3 or calpain, a calcium-activated protease, but not by caspases-1, -8, or -9. (D421E)-Tau, a mutant in which Asp421 was replaced with a Glu, was resistant to cleavage by caspase-3 and tended to suppress staurosporine-induced cell death more efficiently than did wild-type Tau in both transient and stable expression systems. Finally, the incidence of ΔTau-induced cell death was augmented by expression of Aβ precursor protein (APP) or Swedish APP mutant. Taken together, these results suggest that the caspase-3 cleavage product of Tau may contribute to the progression of neuronal cell death in Alzheimer's disease.
Elsevier