NEURONAL CYTOSKELETAL ALTERATIONS IN ALZHEIMER DISEASE
Project Number5R01AG008076-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderIQBAL, KHALID
Awardee OrganizationINSTITUTE FOR BASIC RES IN DEV DISABIL
Description
Abstract Text
The long term objective of tis proposal is to learn the etiology and the
pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease/senile dementia of the Alzheimer type
(AD/SDAT) which constitutes one of the major public health problems in
modern society. In the United States alone presently over three million
senior citizens are affected and these numbers will keep increasing at a
frightening rate unless the disease is understood and prevented.
Several lines of evidence suggest that the state of phosphorylation/
dephosphorylation of neuronal proteins including the microtubule
associated proteins tau might be affected in AD/SDAT and that the
Alzheimer paired helical filaments (PHF) might contain abnormally
phosphorylated tau. The specific aims of this project are 1) a thorough
investigation of the ability of Alzheimer brain tau and PHF, with or
without prior in vitro dephosphorylation, to stimulate in vitro assembly
of microtubules from bovine tubulin-determined by turbidimetric
measurements, negative stain electron microscopy and SDS-PAGE; 2)
identification of the protein kinase/s responsible for the
phosphorylation of tau and PHF in AD/SDAT brain and measurements of this
kinase activity in AD/SDAT and in age-matched unaffected brains--
determined by autoradiography and Western blots of SDS-PAGE; and 3)
study the effect of phosphorylation on the self assembly of tau into
filaments -- determined by negative stain electron microscopy,
turbidimetric measurements and SDS-PAGE.
The studies will test whether the abnormal phosphorylation of tau might
be the cause of the microtubule assembly defect in AD/SDAT brain and
whether dephosphorylation of tau/PHF can reverse this defect in vitro.
Identification of the protein kinase/s responsible for the
phosphorylation of tau in AD/SDAT brain and determination of the
conditions for the self assembly of tau into filaments and their
depolymerization might be critical to devise a rational approach in
correcting this defect. These studies will help eluciate how
alterations of the normal cytoskeleton might contribute to
neurofibrillary pathology and functional deficits in AD/SDAT brain.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01AG008076-02
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