PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

An enzyme-generated fragment of tau measured in serum shows an inverse correlation to cognitive function.

  • Kim Henriksen,
  • Yaguo Wang,
  • Mette G Sørensen,
  • Natasha Barascuk,
  • Joyce Suhy,
  • Jan T Pedersen,
  • Kevin L Duffin,
  • Robert A Dean,
  • Monika Pajak,
  • Claus Christiansen,
  • Qinlong Zheng,
  • Morten A Karsdal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0064990
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. e64990

Abstract

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ObjectiveAlzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating neurological disease characterized by pathological proteolytic cleavage of tau protein, which appears to initiate death of the neurons. The objective of this study was to investigate whether a proteolytic fragment of the tau protein could serve as blood-based biomarker of cognitive function in AD.MethodsWe developed a highly sensitive ELISA assay specifically detecting an A Disintegrin and Metalloproteinase 10 (ADAM10)-generated fragment of tau (Tau-A). We characterized the assay in detail with to respect specificity and reactivity in healthy human serum. We used samples from the Tg4510 tau transgenic mice, which over-express the tau mutant P301L and exhibit a tauopathy with similarities to that observed in AD. We used serum samples from 21 well-characterized Alzheimer's patients, and we correlated the Tau-A levels to cognitive function.ResultsThe Tau-A ELISA specifically detected the cleavage sequence at the N-terminus of a fragment of tau generated by ADAM10 with no cross-reactivity to intact tau or brain extracts. In brain extracts from Tg4510 mice compared to wt controls we found 10-fold higher levels of Tau-A (pConclusionBased on the hypothesis that tau is cleaved proteolytically and then released into the blood, we here provide evidence for the presence of an ADAM10-generated tau fragment (Tau-A) in serum. In addition, the levels of Tau-A showed an inverse correlation to cognitive function, which could indicate that this marker is a serum marker with pathological relevance for AD.