6ODG
SVQIVY, Crystal Structure of a tau protein fragment
Summary for 6ODG
| Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb6odg/pdb |
| Descriptor | Microtubule-associated protein tau (2 entities in total) |
| Functional Keywords | amyloid, tau, microed, protein fibril |
| Biological source | Homo sapiens (Human) |
| Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
| Total formula weight | 1415.63 |
| Authors | Eisenberg, D.S.,Boyer, D.R.,Sawaya, M.R.,Seidler, P.M. (deposition date: 2019-03-26, release date: 2019-10-02, Last modification date: 2024-03-13) |
| Primary citation | Seidler, P.M.,Boyer, D.R.,Murray, K.A.,Yang, T.P.,Bentzel, M.,Sawaya, M.R.,Rosenberg, G.,Cascio, D.,Williams, C.K.,Newell, K.L.,Ghetti, B.,DeTure, M.A.,Dickson, D.W.,Vinters, H.V.,Eisenberg, D.S. Structure-based inhibitors halt prion-like seeding by Alzheimer's disease-and tauopathy-derived brain tissue samples. J.Biol.Chem., 294:16451-16464, 2019 Cited by PubMed Abstract: In Alzheimer's disease (AD) and tauopathies, tau aggregation accompanies progressive neurodegeneration. Aggregated tau appears to spread between adjacent neurons and adjacent brain regions by prion-like seeding. Hence, inhibitors of this seeding offer a possible route to managing tauopathies. Here, we report the 1.0 Å resolution micro-electron diffraction structure of an aggregation-prone segment of tau with the sequence SVQIVY, present in the cores of patient-derived fibrils from AD and tauopathies. This structure illuminates how distinct interfaces of the parent segment, containing the sequence VQIVYK, foster the formation of distinct structures. Peptide-based fibril-capping inhibitors designed to target the two VQIVYK interfaces blocked proteopathic seeding by patient-derived fibrils. These VQIVYK inhibitors add to a panel of tau-capping inhibitors that targets specific polymorphs of recombinant and patient-derived tau fibrils. Inhibition of seeding initiated by brain tissue extracts differed among donors with different tauopathies, suggesting that particular fibril polymorphs of tau are associated with certain tauopathies. Donors with progressive supranuclear palsy exhibited more variation in inhibitor sensitivity, suggesting that fibrils from these donors were more polymorphic and potentially vary within individual donor brains. Our results suggest that a subset of inhibitors from our panel could be specific for particular disease-associated polymorphs, whereas inhibitors that blocked seeding by extracts from all of the tauopathies tested could be used to broadly inhibit seeding by multiple disease-specific tau polymorphs. Moreover, we show that tau-capping inhibitors can be transiently expressed in HEK293 tau biosensor cells, indicating that nucleic acid-based vectors can be used for inhibitor delivery. PubMed: 31537646DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.009688 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
| Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1 Å) |
Structure validation
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