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Article
A68: a Major Subunit of Paired Helical Filaments and Derivatized Forms of Normal Tau
Science Magazine
  • Virginia M. Lee
  • Brian J. Balin, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
  • L Otvos, Jr.
  • John Q. Trojanowski
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-8-1991
Abstract

Putative Alzheimer disease (AD)-specific proteins (A68) were purified to homogeneity and shown to be major subunits of one form of paired helical filaments (PHFs). The amino acid sequence and immunological data indicate that the backbone of A68 is indistinguishable from that of the protein tau (tau), but A68 could be distinguished from normal human tau by the degree to which A68 was phosphorylated and by the specific residues in A68 that served as phosphate acceptors. The larger apparent relative molecular mass (Mr) of A68, compared to normal human tau, was attributed to abnormal phosphorylation of A68 because enzymatic dephosphorylation of A68 reduced its Mr to close to that of normal tau. Moreover, the LysSerProVal motif in normal human tau appeared to be an abnormal phosphorylation site in A68 because the Ser in this motif was a phosphate acceptor site in A68, but not in normal human tau. Thus, the major subunits of a class of PHFs are A68 proteins and the excessive or inappropriate phosphorylation of normal tau may change its apparent Mr, thus transforming tau into A68.

PubMed ID
1899488
Comments

The published version is available at: ezproxy.pcom.edu:2048/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1899488

Citation Information
Virginia M. Lee, Brian J. Balin, L Otvos and John Q. Trojanowski. "A68: a Major Subunit of Paired Helical Filaments and Derivatized Forms of Normal Tau" Science Magazine Vol. 251 Iss. 4994 (1991) p. 675 - 678
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/brian_balin/26/