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Current Drug Targets

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1389-4501
ISSN (Online): 1873-5592

Inhibition of Neurofibrillary Degeneration: A Promising Approach to Alzheimers Disease and Other Tauopathies

Author(s): K. Iqbal and I. Grundke-Iqbal

Volume 5, Issue 6, 2004

Page: [495 - 502] Pages: 8

DOI: 10.2174/1389450043345254

Price: $65

Abstract

Neurofibrillary degeneration (ND) is both a pivotal and a primary lesion of Alzheimer disease (AD) and related tauopathies. To date in all known tauopathies including AD, the neurofibrillary changes, whether of paired helical filaments (PHF), twisted ribbons or straight filaments (SF) are made up of abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau, and the number of these lesions directly correlates to the degree of dementia in the affected individuals. Unlike normal tau which promotes assembly and maintains structure of microtubules, the abnormal tau not only lacks these functions but also sequesters normal tau, MAP1 and MAP2, and causes disassembly of microtubules. This toxic behavior of the abnormal tau is solely due to its hyperphosphorylation because dephosphorylation restores it into a normal-like protein. The abnormal hyperphosphorylation also promotes the self-assembly of tau into PHF / SF. Missense mutations in tau that cosegregate with the disease in inherited cases of frontotemporal dementia make it a more favorable substrate for hyperphosphorylation. A cause of the abnormal hyperphosphorylation in AD brain is a decrease in the activity of protein phosphatase (PP)-2A, a major regulator of the phosphorylation of tau. The abnormal hyperphosphorylation of tau and neurofibrillary degeneration may be inhibited by increasing the activity of PP-2A, inhibiting the activity of one or more tau kinases or by the sequestration of normal tau by the abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau. A great advantage of developing therapeutic drugs to inhibit neurofibrillary degeneration is that the efficacy of these drugs can be monitored by assaying the CSF levels of phosphotau and total tau, both of which are elevated in AD. Thus, the development of drugs that inhibit neurofibrillary degeneration is a very promising and feasible therapeutic approach to AD and related tauopathies.

Keywords: neurofibrillary degeneration, microtubule associated protein tau, microtubules, microtubule associated protein 2, neurofilaments, memantine, abnormal hyperphosphorylation of tau, protein phosphatase-2A

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