skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


This content will become publicly available on February 3, 2026

Title: Protein-Like Polymer for Inhibition of Tau Fibril Propagation in Human-Derived Models of Neurodegeneration
The misfolding, aggregation, and spread of tau protein fibrils underlie tauopathies, a diverse class of neurodegenerative diseases for which effective treatments remain elusive. Among these are corticobasal dementia (CBD) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), canonical examples of 4-repeat (4R) tauopathies characterized by tau isoforms exclusively with four microtubule-binding repeat domains. We target this 4R tau isoform-specific mechanism by focusing on misfolded tau’s distinctive stem-loop-stem structural motif formed by the junction of the 4R-defining alternatively spliced exon and the adjacent constitutive exon. A synthetic peptide based on this stem-loop-stem sequence can induce aggregation and spread in an isoform-specific manner. Here, we develop a protein-like polymer (PLP) in which multiple copies of this synthetic peptide form a brush-like structure capable of preventing tau aggregation by binding and capping fibril endsin vitro, in human brain organoids, and in cellular models with an EC50 of 105 ± 14 nM. PLPs demonstrate robust activity against fibrils derived from CBD and PSP patient brains and a PS19 mouse tauopathy model. Previous tau-targeted treatments have primarily focused on broad tau clearance, aggregation inhibition, or microtubule stabilization, often lacking isoform specificity and precision. In contrast, this approach targets the 4R tau isoform’s unique structural motif, offering a tailored therapeutic intervention for diseases like CBD and PSP. Supported by prior studies showing blood-brain barrier penetrance and safety profiles, this tau-binding PLP offers a promising translational path toward clinical applications in tauopathy treatment.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2403955 2403954
PAR ID:
10594073
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
bioRxiv
Date Published:
Format(s):
Medium: X
Institution:
bioRxiv
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Tau forms fibrillar aggregates that are pathological hallmarks of a family of neurodegenerative diseases known as tauopathies. The synthetic replication of disease-specific fibril structures is a critical gap for developing diagnostic and therapeutic tools. This study debuts a strategy of identifying a critical and minimal folding motif in fibrils characteristic of tauopathies and generating seeding-competent fibrils from the isolated tau peptides. The 19-residue jR2R3 peptide (295 to 313) which spans the R2/R3 splice junction of tau, and includes the P301L mutation, is one such peptide that forms prion-competent fibrils. This tau fragment contains the hydrophobic VQIVYK hexapeptide that is part of the core of all known pathological tau fibril structures and an intramolecular counterstrand that stabilizes the strand–loop–strand (SLS) motif observed in 4R tauopathy fibrils. This study shows that P301L exhibits a duality of effects: it lowers the barrier for the peptide to adopt aggregation-prone conformations and enhances the local structuring of water around the mutation site to facilitate site-directed pinning and dewetting around sites 300-301 to achieve in-register stacking of tau to cross β-sheets. We solved a 3 Å cryo-EM structure of jR2R3-P301L fibrils in which each protofilament layer contains two jR2R3-P301L copies, of which one adopts a SLS fold found in 4R tauopathies and the other wraps around the SLS fold to stabilize it, reminiscent of the three- and fourfold structures observed in 4R tauopathies. These jR2R3-P301L fibrils are competent to template full-length 4R tau in a prion-like manner. 
    more » « less
  2. Filaments made up of different isoforms of tau protein are associated with a variety of neurodegenerative diseases. Filaments made up of the 4R-tau isoform, which has four repeat regions (R1 to R4), are found in patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, while filaments made of the 3R-tau isoform, which contains only three repeat units (R1, R3, and R4), are found in patients with Pick’s disease (frontotemporal dementia). In this work, a predictive coarse-grained protein force field, the associative memory water-mediated structure and energy model (AWSEM), is used to study the energy landscapes of nucleation of the two different fibrils derived from patients with Pick’s and Alzheimer’s diseases. The landscapes for nucleating both fibril types contain amorphous oligomers leading to branched structures as well as prefibrillar oligomers. These two classes of oligomers differ in their structural details: The prefibrillar oligomers have more parallel in-register β-strands, which ultimately lead to amyloid fibrils, while the amorphous oligomers are characterized by a near random β-strand stacking, leading to a distinct amorphous phase. The landscape topography suggests that there must be significant structural reordering, or “backtracking,” to transit from the amorphous aggregation channel to the fibrillization channel. Statistical mechanical perturbation theory allows us to evaluate the effects of changing concentration on the aggregation free-energy landscapes and to predict the effects of phosphorylation, which is known to facilitate the aggregation of tau repeats. 
    more » « less
  3. The PHF6 (Val-Gln-Ile-Val-Tyr-Lys) motif, found in all isoforms of the microtubule-associated protein tau, forms an integral part of ordered cores of amyloid fibrils formed in tauopathies and is thought to play a fundamental role in tau aggregation. Because PHF6 as an isolated hexapeptide assembles into ordered fibrils on its own, it is investigated as a minimal model for insight into the initial stages of aggregation of larger tau fragments. Even for this small peptide, however, the large length and time scales associated with fibrillization pose challenges for simulation studies of its dynamic assembly, equilibrium configurational landscape, and phase behavior. Here, we develop an accurate, bottom-up coarse-grained model of PHF6 for large-scale simulations of its aggregation, which we use to uncover molecular interactions and thermodynamic driving forces governing its assembly. The model, not trained on any explicit information about fibrillar structure, predicts coexistence of formed fibrils with monomers in solution, and we calculate a putative equilibrium phase diagram in concentration-temperature space. We also characterize the configurational and free energetic landscape of PHF6 oligomers. Importantly, we demonstrate with a model of heparin that this widely studied cofactor enhances the aggregation propensity of PHF6 by ordering monomers during nucleation and remaining associated with growing fibrils, consistent with experimentally characterized heparin–tau interactions. Overall, this effort provides detailed molecular insight into PHF6 aggregation thermodynamics and pathways and, furthermore, demonstrates the potential of modern multiscale modeling techniques to produce predictive models of amyloidogenic peptides simultaneously capturing sequence-specific effects and emergent aggregate structures. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Microtubule‐associated protein tau is an intrinsically disordered, highly soluble protein found primarily in neurons. Under normal conditions, tau regulates the stability of axonal microtubules and intracellular vesicle transport. However, in patients of neurodegeneration such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), tau forms neurofibrillary deposits, which correlates well with the disease progression. Identifying molecular signatures in tau, such as posttranslational modification, truncation, and conformational change has great potential to detect earliest signs of neurodegeneration and develop therapeutic strategies. Here, we show that full‐length human tau, including the longest isoform found in the adult brain, can be robustly displayed on the surface of yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast‐displayed tau binds to anti‐tau antibodies that cover epitopes ranging from the N‐terminus to the 4R repeat region. Unlike tau expressed in the yeast cytosol, surface‐displayed tau was not phosphorylated at sites found in AD patients (probed by antibodies AT8, AT270, AT180, and PHF‐1). However, yeast‐displayed tau showed clear binding to paired helical filament (PHF) tau conformation‐specific antibodies Alz‐50, MC‐1, and Tau‐2. Although the tau possessed a conformation found in PHFs, oligomerization or aggregation into larger filaments was undetected. Taken together, yeast‐displayed tau enables robust measurement of protein interactions and is of particular interest for characterizing conformational change. 
    more » « less
  5. HS3ST1is a genetic risk gene associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and overexpressed in patients, but how it contributes to the disease progression is unknown. We report the analysis of brain heparan sulfate (HS) from AD and other tauopathies using a LC-MS/MS method. A specific 3-O-sulfated HS displayed sevenfold increase in the AD group (n= 14,P< 0.0005). Analysis of the HS modified by recombinant sulfotransferases and HS from genetic knockout mice revealed that the specific 3-O-sulfated HS is made by 3-O-sulfotransferase isoform 1 (3-OST-1), which is encoded by theHS3ST1gene. A synthetic tetradecasaccharide (14-mer) carrying the specific 3-O-sulfated domain displayed stronger inhibition for tau internalization than a 14-mer without the domain, suggesting that the 3-O-sulfated HS is used in tau cellular uptake. Our findings suggest that the overexpression ofHS3ST1gene may enhance the spread of tau pathology, uncovering a previously unidentified therapeutic target for AD. 
    more » « less