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P021

Peptide 021, GLXC-21260

Quick Stats
Studies 37
Trials 57
Score 1
2023 pubmed 17 citations

Tau and Alzheimer's disease: Past, present and future.

Iqbal. Khalid K

Key Findings

  • s and about 20 related diseases.", "In Alzheimer
  • Both active (vaccine) and passive (antibody) tau‑targeting therapies are being tested in humans, with results so far ranging from disappointing to modestly hopeful.

Practical Outcomes

  • For now there are no direct actions biohackers can take to influence tau pathology. The main takeaway is to monitor the outcomes of tau‑targeted clinical trials, as future successful therapies may eventually become available for preventive or therapeutic use.

Summary

The paper explains that a protein called tau becomes abnormal in Alzheimer's and other brain diseases, forming tangled clumps that damage nerve cells. Scientists are trying to treat this by making vaccines or antibodies that target tau, but the early human trials have shown mixed results and no clear cure yet.

Abstract

My journey with tau started when in 1974 for the first time I isolated neurofibrillary tangles of paired helical filaments (PHFs) from autopsied Alzheimer's disease (AD) brains and discovered that they were made up of a ~50-70 KDa protein on SDS-polyacrylamide gels. Subsequently my team discovered that this PHF protein and the microtubule-associated factor called tau were one and the same protein. However, we found that tau in neurofibrillary tangles/PHFs in AD brain was abnormally hyperphosphorylated, and unlike normal tau, which promoted the assembly of tubulin into microtubules, the AD-hyperphosphorylated tau inhibited microtubule assembly. These discoveries of tau pathology in AD opened a new and a major area of research on tau and on the molecular pathology of this major cause of dementia in middle- and old-age individuals. Tau pathology, which without fail is made up of the aggregated hyperphosphorylated state of the protein, is also the hallmark lesion of a family of around 20 related neurodegenerative diseases, called tauopathies. Currently, tau pathology is a major drug target for the treatment of AD and related tauopathies. Both active and passive tau immunization human clinical trials at various stages are underway. Initial results range from negative to partially promising. Future studies will reveal whether tau therapy alone or in combination with drugs targeting Aβ and/or neurodegeneration will be required to achieve the most effective treatment for AD and related disorders.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-12-21T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1002/cm.21822

Citations

17

References

60