potassium-cyanate and Alzheimer-Disease

potassium-cyanate has been researched along with Alzheimer-Disease* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for potassium-cyanate and Alzheimer-Disease

ArticleYear
Modification of tau to an Alzheimer's type protein interferes with its interaction with microtubules.
    Cellular and molecular biology (Noisy-le-Grand, France), 1998, Volume: 44, Issue:7

    The microtubule associated protein tau is the main structural component of paired helical filaments (PHFs), aberrant polymers found intracellularly in neurons of brains with the Alzheimer's disease. Glycation is one of the posttranslational modifications that has been found in tau from PHFs, but not in normal brain tau. Studies were carried out with purified tau protein subjected to chemical modifications, in order to further investigate the mechanisms of tau self-association into PHFs. Tau was subjected to modifications affecting reactive lysyl residues, e.g., carbamoylation with potassium cyanate and glycation reaction with glucose. The effects of these modifications to produce functional alterations in tau capacity to bind brain tubulin and to induce microtubule assembly were investigated. Chemically-modified tau and tau of Alzheimer's type exhibited a similar microtubule interaction behavior as analysed by overlay assays, but those were different than normal tau controls. On the other hand, studies of the microtubule assembly kinetics indicated that the reported tau modifications resulted in a loss of its capacity to promote microtubule assembly from purified tubulin preparations. The data on the differences in the electrophoretic profiles, Western blots and the overlay patterns, along with those on the microtubule polymerisation of normal brain tau as compared with both modified and Alzheimer's tau, suggest changes in the functional behavior of this protein as a result of its structural modifications. These studies were complemented with an immunogold analysis at the electron microscope level, which indicated that the modified tau did not incorporate into assembled microtubules. These findings, combined with the results on tau chemical modifications suggest that the reactive lysine residues within functional domains on tau, e.g., those of the repetitive binding motifs, were affected by these modifications. Furthermore, these observations provide new clues to understand the anomalous interactions of tau in Alzheimer's disease.

    Topics: Alzheimer Disease; Animals; Blotting, Western; Cattle; Cyanates; Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Glycosylation; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Microtubules; tau Proteins; Tubulin

1998