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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

An N-terminal fragment of ProSAAS (a granin-like neuroendocrine peptide precursor) is associated with tau inclusions in Pick's disease.

The deposition of aggregated tau in cytoplasmic inclusions is one of the common neuropathological features in various dementing neurodegenerative disorders. At present, it remains unclear whether tau inclusions exert neurotoxicity or they are simply the consequence of neurodegeneration. In our approach for the analysis of the composition of tau inclusions, we detected the intense binding of anti-diacylglycerol kinase-zeta (DGK-zeta) antibodies to Pick bodies (PBs), which represent tau inclusions in Pick's disease. The polyclonal antibodies were found to cross-react with a 21-kDa protein, but not with tau or ubiquitin, on Western blots of normal human brain extracts. Analysis of the 21-kDa protein by two-dimensional-gel electrophoresis and mass-spectrometry revealed that the protein is an N-terminal fragment of proSAAS (a human granin-like neuroendocrine peptide precursor). Our results suggest that sequestration of the N-terminal fragment of proSAAS in intracellular PBs may cause a functional disturbance of neurons in Pick's disease.[1]

References

  1. An N-terminal fragment of ProSAAS (a granin-like neuroendocrine peptide precursor) is associated with tau inclusions in Pick's disease. Kikuchi, K., Arawaka, S., Koyama, S., Kimura, H., Ren, C.H., Wada, M., Kawanami, T., Kurita, K., Daimon, M., Kawakatsu, S., Kadoya, T., Goto, K., Kato, T. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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