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Sci. Aging Knowl. Environ., 22 May 2002 NOTEWORTHY ARTICLESTau Tangler: Protein promotes dementia-associated conglomerations in flies (Neurodegenerative disease)R. John Davenport http://sageke.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/sageke;2002/20/nw67Key Words: Wnt TCF shaggy armadillo neurodegeneration
Abstract: Sometimes, even a well-behaved child can get into a tangle if prodded by a friend. A new study pinpoints a molecule that urges an otherwise docile protein to snarl up fly neurons. The engineered flies used in the experiments are the first to recreate an abnormal protein aggregate associated with human dementia.
When a protein called tau clumps inside neurons, neurofibrillary tangles result. These protein thickets sprout in people afflicted with diseases such as Alzheimer's (see "Detangling Alzheimer's Disease" and Honig Case Study). Scientists are hunting for other molecules that encourage the aggregation: Some mutations in the tau gene make the protein gummier than usual, but many people with dementia have the normal form of tau. Tangled tau carries more phosphate molecules than the free-floating version, and an enzyme called glycogen synthase kinase-3
To probe the relation between tau and GSK-3
The researchers next investigated whether GSK-3
The work exposes a key contributor to tangle formation, but GSK-3 --R. John Davenport G. R. Jackson, M. Wiedau-Pazos, T.-K. Sang, N. Wagle, C. A. Brown, S. Massachi, D. H. Geschwind, Human wild-type tau interacts with wingless pathway components and produces neurofibrillary pathology in Drosophila. Neuron 34, 509-519 (2002). [Abstract] [Full Text] Citation: R. J. Davenport, Tau Tangler: Protein promotes dementia-associated conglomerations in flies (Neurodegenerative disease). Science's SAGE KE (22 May 2002), http://sageke.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/sageke;2002/20/nw67
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Science of Aging Knowledge Environment. ISSN 1539-6150