APA
Gil Alberdi, Laura & Federico, Concetta & Pinedo, Fernando & Bruno, Francesca & Rebolledo, Ana B. & Montoya, Juan J. & Olazabal Olarreaga, Isabel & Ferrer, Isidre & Saccone, Salvatore .Aging dependent effect of nuclear tau.
ISO 690
Gil Alberdi, Laura & Federico, Concetta & Pinedo, Fernando & Bruno, Francesca & Rebolledo, Ana B. & Montoya, Juan J. & Olazabal Olarreaga, Isabel & Ferrer, Isidre & Saccone, Salvatore. Aging dependent effect of nuclear tau.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/25960
Resumen:
Tau protein is characterized by a complex pattern of phosphorylation and is localized in the cytoplasm
and nucleus in both neuronal and non-neuronal cells. Human AT100 nuclear tau, endowed by phospho rylation in Thr212/Ser214, was recently shown to decline in cornus ammonis 1 (CA1) and dentate gyrus
(DG) in Alzheimer¿s disease (AD), but a defined function for this nuclear tau remains unclear. Here we
show that AT100 progressively increases in the nuclei of neuronal and non-neuronal cells during aging,
and decreases in the more severe AD stages, as recently shown, and in cancer cells (colorectal adenocar cinoma and breast cancer). AT100, in addition to a co-localization with the DAPI-positive heterochro matin, was detected in the nucleolus of pyramidal cells from the CA1 region, shown to be at its
highest level in the more senescent cells and in the first stage of AD (ADI), and disappearing in the more
severe AD cases (ADIV). Taking into account the nuclear distribution of AT100 during cell aging and its
relation to the chromatin changes observed in degenerated neurons, as well as in cancerous cells, which
are both cellular pathologies associated with age, we can consider the Thr212/Ser214 phosphorylated
nuclear tau as a molecular marker of cell aging.