Papers

Peer-reviewed International journal
Mar, 2020

A soluble phosphorylated tau signature links tau, amyloid and the evolution of stages of dominantly inherited Alzheimer's disease.

Nature medicine
  • Nicolas R Barthélemy
  • Yan Li
  • Nelly Joseph-Mathurin
  • Brian A Gordon
  • Jason Hassenstab
  • Tammie L S Benzinger
  • Virginia Buckles
  • Anne M Fagan
  • Richard J Perrin
  • Alison M Goate
  • John C Morris
  • Celeste M Karch
  • Chengjie Xiong
  • Ricardo Allegri
  • Patricio Chrem Mendez
  • Sarah B Berman
  • Takeshi Ikeuchi
  • Hiroshi Mori
  • Hiroyuki Shimada
  • Mikio Shoji
  • Kazushi Suzuki
  • James Noble
  • Martin Farlow
  • Jasmeer Chhatwal
  • Neill R Graff-Radford
  • Stephen Salloway
  • Peter R Schofield
  • Colin L Masters
  • Ralph N Martins
  • Antoinette O'Connor
  • Nick C Fox
  • Johannes Levin
  • Mathias Jucker
  • Audrey Gabelle
  • Sylvain Lehmann
  • Chihiro Sato
  • Randall J Bateman
  • Eric McDade
  • Display all

Volume
26
Number
3
First page
398
Last page
407
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.1038/s41591-020-0781-z

Development of tau-based therapies for Alzheimer's disease requires an understanding of the timing of disease-related changes in tau. We quantified the phosphorylation state at multiple sites of the tau protein in cerebrospinal fluid markers across four decades of disease progression in dominantly inherited Alzheimer's disease. We identified a pattern of tau staging where site-specific phosphorylation changes occur at different periods of disease progression and follow distinct trajectories over time. These tau phosphorylation state changes are uniquely associated with structural, metabolic, neurodegenerative and clinical markers of disease, and some (p-tau217 and p-tau181) begin with the initial increases in aggregate amyloid-β as early as two decades before the development of aggregated tau pathology. Others (p-tau205 and t-tau) increase with atrophy and hypometabolism closer to symptom onset. These findings provide insights into the pathways linking tau, amyloid-β and neurodegeneration, and may facilitate clinical trials of tau-based treatments.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-0781-z
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32161412
PubMed Central
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7309367
ID information
  • DOI : 10.1038/s41591-020-0781-z
  • Pubmed ID : 32161412
  • Pubmed Central ID : PMC7309367

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