3 research outputs found

    Characterization of Novel CSF Tau and ptau Biomarkers for Alzheimer’s Disease

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    <div><p>Cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) Aβ42, tau and p181tau are widely accepted biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Numerous studies show that CSF tau and p181tau levels are elevated in mild-to-moderate AD compared to age-matched controls. In addition, these increases might predict preclinical AD in cognitively normal elderly. Despite their importance as biomarkers, the molecular nature of CSF tau and ptau is not known. In the current study, reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography was used to enrich and concentrate tau prior to western-blot analysis. Multiple N-terminal and mid-domain fragments of tau were detected in pooled CSF with apparent sizes ranging from <20 kDa to ~40 kDa. The pattern of tau fragments in AD and control samples were similar. In contrast, full-length tau and C-terminal-containing fragments were not detected. To quantify levels, five tau ELISAs and three ptau ELISAs were developed to detect different overlapping regions of the protein. The discriminatory potential of each assay was determined using 20 AD and 20 age-matched control CSF samples. Of the tau ELISAs, the two assays specific for tau containing N-terminal sequences, amino acids 9-198 (numbering based on tau 441) and 9-163, exhibited the most significant differences between AD and control samples. In contrast, CSF tau was not detected with an ELISA specific for a more C-terminal region (amino acids 159-335). Significant discrimination was also observed with ptau assays measuring amino acids 159-p181 and 159-p231. Interestingly, the discriminatory potential of p181 was reduced when measured in the context of tau species containing amino acids 9-p181. Taken together, these results demonstrate that tau in CSF occurs as a series of fragments and that discrimination of AD from control is dependent on the subset of tau species measured. These assays provide novel tools to investigate CSF tau and ptau as biomarkers for other neurodegenerative diseases.</p> </div

    Detection of tau fragments in human CSF.

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    <p>Human control and AD CSF subjected to RP-HPLC, fractions collected and run on SDS-PAGE gels followed by western-blotting with different tau antibodies. A) HT7 (mid domain antibody). B) Tau 12 (N-terminal antibody). C) K9JA (C-terminal microtubule repeat domain antibody). D) IgG1 isotype control. On each blot, human recombinant tau441 (tau) is included in lane 1 and molecular weight markers (mw) in lane 2 followed by the HPLC fractions from 1 to 6 or HPLC fractions 7 to 11. Fractions 1 and 2 were pooled and run as a single sample, while fractions 3-10 were run as individual samples. Control CSF (C) and AD CSF (D) samples for each fraction were run side by side for comparison.</p

    Tau and ptau levels in 20 AD and 20 control CSF samples.

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    <p>A set of 20 AD and 20 age-matched normal control CSF samples were analyzed using the tau ELISAs (HT7-BT2, HT7-Tau5, Tau12-BT2, Tau12-HT7 and HT7-77G7) and pTau ELISAs (HT7-AT270, HT7-PHF6 and Tau12-AT270). Dashed lines indicate the assay LLQ corrected for CSF dilution. Statistics based on 2-tailed Student’s t test comparison of log-transformed data, * p < 0.05; ** p< 0.01; *** p < 0.001. </p
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