Screening of tau protein kinase inhibitors in a tauopathy-relevant cell-based model of tau hyperphosphorylation and oligomerization
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Public Library of Science
Abstract
Tauopathies are a class of neurodegenerative disorders characterized by abnormal deposition of post-translationally modified tau protein in the human brain. Tauopathies are associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), and other diseases. Hyperphosphorylation increases tau tendency to aggregate and form neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), a pathological hallmark of AD. In this study, okadaic acid (OA, 100 nM), a protein phosphatase 1/2A inhibitor, was treated for 24h in mouse neuroblastoma (N2a) and differentiated rat primary neuronal cortical cell cultures (CTX) to induce tau-hyperphosphorylation and oligomerization as a cell-based tauopathy model. Following the treatments, the effectiveness of different kinase inhibitors was assessed using the tauopathy-relevant tau antibodies through tau-immunoblotting, including the sites: pSer202/pThr205 (AT8), pThr181 (AT270), pSer202 (CP13), pSer396/pSer404 (PHF-1), and pThr231 (RZ3). OA-treated samples induced tau phosphorylation and oligomerization at all tested epitopes, forming a monomeric band (46–67 kDa) and oligomeric bands (170 kDa and 240 kDa). We found that TBB (a casein kinase II inhibitor), AR and LiCl (GSK-3 inhibitors), cyclosporin A (calcineurin inhibitor), and Saracatinib (Fyn kinase inhibitor) caused robust inhibition of OA-induced monomeric and oligomeric p-tau in both N2a and CTX culture. Additionally, a cyclin-dependent kinase 5 inhibitor (Roscovitine) and a calcium chelator (EGTA) showed contrasting results between the two neuronal cultures. This study provides a comprehensive view of potential drug candidates (TBB, CsA, AR, and Saracatinib), and their efficacy against tau hyperphosphorylation and oligomerization processes. These findings warrant further experimentation, possibly including animal models of tauopathies, which may provide a putative Neurotherapy for AD, CTE, and other forms of tauopathy-induced neurodegenerative diseases. © 2020 Yadikar et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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Animals, Cell line, Cyclosporine, Glycogen synthase kinase 3, Lithium chloride, Mice, Models, biological, Okadaic acid, Phosphorylation, Protein kinase inhibitors, Protein multimerization, Rats, Tauopathies, Triazoles, 1 (4 methoxybenzyl) 3 (5 nitro 2 thiazolyl)urea, 4,5,6,7 tetrabromobenzotriazole, A 1070722, Ar 1014418, Egtazic acid, Epitope, Glycogen synthase kinase 3 inhibitor, Monomer, Oligomer, Phosphotransferase inhibitor, Protein antibody, Roscovitine, Saracatinib, Serine, Tau antibody, Tau protein, Threonine, Unclassified drug, 4,5,6,7-tetrabromobenzotriazole, Protein kinase inhibitor, Tau-protein kinase, Triazole derivative, Alzheimer disease, Animal cell, Animal experiment, Animal model, Apoptosis, Article, Brain cell culture, Cell lysate, Cell metabolism, Chronic traumatic encephalopathy, Controlled study, Dose response, Drug activity, Drug efficacy, Drug potency, Enzyme inhibition, Ic50, Immunoblotting, Mouse, Neuroblastoma, Nonhuman, Oligomerization, Rat, Tau hyperphosphorylation, Tauopathy, Animal, Biological model, Drug effect, Metabolism, Pathology