Proteomics approach to understanding tau co-aggregation and interacting partners in Alzheimer’s disease and related tauopathies Restricted; Files Only

Shapley, Sarah (Summer 2025)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/12579v08k?locale=en
Published

Abstract

In Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and other tauopathies, tau dissociates from microtubules and forms toxic aggregates that contribute to neurodegeneration. Although some of the pathological interactions of tau have been identified from postmortem brain tissue, these studies are limited by their inability to capture transient interactions. To investigate the interactome of aggregate-prone fragments of tau, we applied an in vitro proximity labeling technique using split TurboID biotin ligase (sTurbo) fused with the tau microtubule repeat domain (TauRD), a core region implicated in tau aggregation. We characterized sTurbo TauRD co-expression, robust enzyme activity and nuclear and cytoplasmic localization in a human cell line. Following enrichment of biotinylated proteins and mass spectrometry, we identified over 700 TauRD interactors. Gene ontology analysis of enriched TauRD interactors highlighted processes often dysregulated in tauopathies, including spliceosome complexes, RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), and nuclear speckles. The disease relevance of these interactors was supported by integrating recombinant TauRD interactome data with human AD tau interactome datasets and protein co-expression networks from individuals with AD and related tauopathies. This revealed an overlap with the TauRD interactome and several modules enriched with RBPs and increased in AD and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP). The sTurbo TauRD interactome also highly mapped to insoluble proteins in detergent-insoluble tauopathies. These findings emphasize the importance of nuclear pathways in tau pathology, such as RNA splicing and nuclear-cytoplasmic transport, which are traditionally enriched in insoluble fractions in disease. It has thus far been difficult to parse tau co-aggregating partners, however, sTurbo TauRD system mapped to multiple disease-relevant insoluble proteins associated with insoluble tau levels in tauopathies, establishing the sTurbo TauRD system as a valuable tool for exploring the tau interactome.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

1.0     Introduction: Tau and its co-aggregating partners in Alzheimer’s disease &

related tauopathies

1.1     Physiological and pathological tau

1.1.1      Isoform expression, structure, and localization

1.1.2      Tau homeostatic function:

1.2     Tauopathies: an overview

1.2.1      Primary & secondary tauopathies:

1.2.2      3R, 4R, and mixed tauopathies:

1.2.3      An introduction to pathological tau:

1.2.4      Tau post-translational modifications (PTMs):

1.2.5      The tau aggregation continuum:

1.3     Methods to investigate tauopathies

1.3.1      Proteomics of postmortem brain tissue

1.3.2      Cellular models

1.3.3      In vitro biochemical assay

1.3.4      Animal models

1.4     Investigating insoluble co-aggregating partners of tau

1.4.1      RNA-binding proteins role in neurodegeneration

1.4.2      Fibril formation LLPS/RBPs

1.5     Current therapeutics targeting tauopathies

1.5.1      FDA-approved therapies:

1.5.2      Tau therapeutic targets:

1.5.3      Developing therapeutics

1.6     Research aims & contributions

1.7     Figures

Figure 1.1 Tau spread, cell-type involvement, core tau fibril structure, and symptoms

across several distinct tauopathies.

Figure 1.2: Tau aggregation continuum

Figure 1.3: HEK-FRET TauRD seeding workflow

Figure 1.4: Proposed model of in vitro tau seeding

Figure 1.5: Capturing insoluble co-aggregating tau interactors

2.0 Marmosets as model systems for the study of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias: Substantiation of physiological tau 3R and 4R isoform expression

and phosphorylation

2.1     Introduction

2.2     Results

2.2.1      MAPT mRNA and protein expression in the marmoset brain

2.2.2      Mass spectrometry of 3R and 4R Tau

2.2.3      Visualization of 3R and 4R Tau expression in marmoset brain

2.2.4      Tau isoform expression in the synaptic region

2.2.5      Tau phosphorylation, oligomerization in marmoset brain

2.3     Materials and methods

2.4     Discussion

2.5     Figures

Figure 2.1: 3R and 4R tau expression in marmoset brain.

Figure 2.2. Quantification 3R Tau expression in marmoset brain.

Figure 2.3. Schematic mass spectrometry overview using a complementary dual

enzymatic digestion approach with Trypsin and LysargiNase (LysArg).

Figure 2.4: 3R and 4R tau expression and ratio quantification by LysArg digestion in marmoset brain by targeted mass spectrometry.

Figure 2.5. Light and heavy representative peptide peaks for quantitative mass spectrometry across human, marmoset, and mouse brain lysates.

Figure 2.6. 3R and 4R Tau expression by Trypsin in Marmosets by targeted mass spectrometry.

Figure 2.7. 3R Tau and 4R tau expression in hippocampus and entorhinal cortex of marmoset brain.

Figure 2.8. Negative control background staining of IF.

Figure 2.9. Immunohistochemistry of 12-year aged marmoset brain.

Figure 2.10. 4R tau and 3R tau are expressed in the synaptic region of the marmoset prefrontal cortex.

Figure 2.11. Phosphorylated tau in Sarkosyl soluble and insoluble fractions from

marmoset brain.

Table 2.1. Average demographics of post-mortem human brain tissue.

Table 2.2. Demographics of case traits for human tissues.

3.0     sTurbo TauRD capturing insoluble-enriched RNA-binding proteins related to tauopathies

3.1     Introduction

3.2     Result

3.2.1      Establishment of a Split-TurboID TauRD Proximity Labeling System in Cell

Culture

3.2.2      Development and Validation of a Bicistronic sTurbo TauRD Construct for

Uniform Expression and Functional Proximity Labeling in HEK293 Cells

3.2.3      Proximity Labeling of Tau MTBR Interactors and Mass Spectrometry Analysis

in Cells Reveals Established and Novel Tau-associated Pathways

3.2.4      Network Analysis of Human AD and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy Brain

Tissue Identifies Protein Modules Associated with Tau Pathology

3.2.5      Integrating the TauRD Interactome with AD and PSP Network Modules to

Identify Disease-Associated Modules Linked to Tau PPIs

3.3     Materials and methods

3.4     Discussion

3.5     Figures

Figure 3.1: sTurbo TauRD expression and biotin ligase activity in a human cell line.

Figure 3.2: Development and characterization of a bicistronic sTurbo TauRD construct

and functional proximity labeling.

Figure 3.3: 2A efficiently cleaves fragments and equally biotinylates sTurbo TauRD fragments.

Figure 3.4: Differential abundance analysis of TauRD proteomics demonstrates

nuclear protein enrichment.

Figure 3.5: Quality control western blots and total protein silver stains.

Figure 3.6. Intersection of tau-interactome datasets reveals core protein functions

shared between human AD Tau and sTurbo TauRD.

Figure 3.7: Network analysis of human AD and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP)

brain tissue.

Figure 3.8: Integration of the TauRD interactome with a human tauopathy proteomic network identifies RNA-binding protein modules associated with AD and PSP that are enriched in insoluble proteins.

Figure 3.9: Insoluble disease mapping module classification across RBP localization,

key functions, and domains.

Figure 3.10: Network visualization of significant human RNA binding protein modules

that overlap with the sTurbo TauRD interactome.

Figure 3.11: Insoluble and RBP-enriched module hub proteins and BioGrid interaction Networks.

Figure 3.12: Tau-AP enriched proteins correlate with insoluble tau levels in disease

4.0     Discussion and Future Directions

4.1     Summary and contributions of Marmoset tau characterization

4.2     Summary and contributions of sTurbo TauRD interactome and integration

with human tauopathies

4.3     Additional experimental considerations

4.3.1      Development of additional in vivo & in vitro models of tauopathy

4.3.2      Mechanistic validation of candidate proteins:

4.3.3      Integrating proteomics from additional brain regions

4.4     Combined study contributions and future directions

4.5     Figures

Figure 4.1 In-depth TMT proteomic measurement of tryptic 3R and 4R tau peptides.

Figure 4.2: Summary of study contributions & future directions

5.0     References

Figure list Page

Figure 1.1 Tau spread, cell-type involvement, core tau fibril structure, and symptoms

across several distinct tauopathies. ............................................................................................ 24

Figure 1.2: Tau aggregation continuum ...................................................................................... 25

Figure 1.3: HEK-FRET TauRD seeding workflow ....................................................................... 26

Figure 1.4: Proposed model of in vitro tau seeding .................................................................... 27

Figure 1.5: Capturing insoluble co-aggregating tau interactors .................................................. 27

Figure 2.1: 3R and 4R tau expression in marmoset brain. ......................................................... 56

Figure 2.2. Quantification 3R Tau expression in marmoset brain. .............................................. 57

Figure 2.3. Schematic mass spectrometry overview using a complementary dual

enzymatic digestion approach with Trypsin and LysargiNase (LysArg). .................................... 58

Figure 2.4: 3R and 4R tau expression and ratio quantification by LysArg digestion in

marmoset brain by targeted mass spectrometry. ....................................................................... 60

Figure 2.5. Light and heavy representative peptide peaks for quantitative mass

spectrometry across human, marmoset, and mouse brain lysates. ........................................... 62

Figure 2.6. 3R and 4R Tau expression by Trypsin in Marmosets by targeted mass

spectrometry. .............................................................................................................................. 64

Figure 2.7. 3R Tau and 4R tau expression in hippocampus and entorhinal cortex of

marmoset brain. .......................................................................................................................... 66

Figure 2.8. Negative control background staining of IF. ............................................................. 68

Figure 2.9. Immunohistochemistry of 12-year aged marmoset brain. ........................................ 70

Figure 2.10. 4R tau and 3R tau are expressed in the synaptic region of the marmoset

prefrontal cortex. ......................................................................................................................... 72

Figure 2.11. Phosphorylated tau in Sarkosyl soluble and insoluble fractions from

marmoset brain. .......................................................................................................................... 74

Table 2.1. Average demographics of post-mortem human brain tissue. .................................... 75

Table 2.2. Demographics of case traits for human tissues. ........................................................ 76

Figure 3.1: sTurbo TauRD expression and biotin ligase activity in a human cell line. .............. 108

Figure 3.2: Development and characterization of a bicistronic sTurbo TauRD construct

and functional proximity labeling. .............................................................................................. 110

Figure 3.3: 2A efficiently cleaves fragments and equally biotinylates sTurbo TauRD

fragments. ................................................................................................................................. 112

Figure 3.4: Differential abundance analysis of TauRD proteomics demonstrates nuclear

protein enrichment. ................................................................................................................... 114

Figure 3.5: Quality control western blots and total protein silver stains. ................................... 117

Figure 3.6. Intersection of tau-interactome datasets reveals core protein functions shared

between human AD Tau and sTurbo TauRD. .......................................................................... 118

Figure 3.7: Network analysis of human AD and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) brain

tissue. ....................................................................................................................................... 120

Figure 3.8: Integration of the TauRD interactome with a human tauopathy proteomic

network identifies RNA-binding protein modules associated with AD and PSP that are

enriched in insoluble proteins. .................................................................................................. 122

Figure 3.9: Insoluble disease mapping module classification across RBP localization, key

functions, and domains. ............................................................................................................ 123

Figure 3.10: Network visualization of significant human RNA binding protein modules that

overlap with the sTurbo TauRD interactome. ........................................................................... 125

Figure 3.11: Insoluble and RBP-enriched module hub proteins and BioGrid interaction

Networks. .................................................................................................................................. 127

Figure 3.12: Tau-AP enriched proteins correlate with insoluble tau levels in disease .............. 129

12

Figure 4.1 In-depth TMT proteomic measurement of tryptic 3R and 4R tau peptides. ............. 142

Figure 4.2: Summary of study contributions & future directions ............................................... 143

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