Next Article in Journal
Morphing of Ibogaine: A Successful Attempt into the Search for Sigma-2 Receptor Ligands
Next Article in Special Issue
Shedding Light on the Interaction of Human Anti-Apoptotic Bcl-2 Protein with Ligands through Biophysical and in Silico Studies
Previous Article in Journal
Interplay of Auxin and Cytokinin in Lateral Root Development
Previous Article in Special Issue
Effects of CD4 Binding on Conformational Dynamics, Molecular Motions, and Thermodynamics of HIV-1 gp120
 
 
Article
Peer-Review Record

Zn2+ Aggravates Tau Aggregation and Neurotoxicity

Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2019, 20(3), 487; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20030487
by Xuexia Li 1,2, Xiubo Du 3,* and Jiazuan Ni 1,2,3,*
Reviewer 1: Anonymous
Reviewer 2: Anonymous
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2019, 20(3), 487; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20030487
Submission received: 31 December 2018 / Revised: 20 January 2019 / Accepted: 20 January 2019 / Published: 23 January 2019
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Proteins and Protein-Ligand Interactions)

Round  1

Reviewer 1 Report

Li et al. show the cysteine residue of the R3 fragment of the tau protein can bind Zn2+ and other transition metals with low micromolar affinity, extending previous work on the subject.1 Binding of zinc was associated with accelerated aggregation, a shift to shorter filaments and non-fibrillar oligomers, higher cellular uptake, and enhanced ROS production and neurotoxicity2 in N2A cells. The experiments are well designed and support the main conclusions of the manuscript; I have no problem with this aspect.

My only comments relate to the extrapolation of the results to the full-length tau protein. Some research has been recently performed in this respect and should be referenced and discussed at least briefly. In particular, full length tau seems to have a different binding mode (n=1),2, 3 a higher affinity binding site (Ka~1e6),2, 3 and possibly a different aggregation pathway than the R3 fragment. Possible differences between R3 and full-length tau should be discussed.  It would also be helpful to have a very brief discussion on the relevant in vivo concentrations of zinc and possibly copper in the context of the binding affinity.

[1] Jiji, A. C., Arshad, A., Dhanya, S. R., Shabana, P. S., Mehjubin, C. K., and Vijayan, V. (2017) Zn(2+) Interrupts R4-R3 Association Leading to Accelerated Aggregation of Tau Protein, Chemistry 23, 16976-16979.

[2] Hu, J. Y., Zhang, D. L., Liu, X. L., Li, X. S., Cheng, X. Q., Chen, J., Du, H. N., and Liang, Y. (2017) Pathological concentration of zinc dramatically accelerates abnormal aggregation of full-length human Tau and thereby significantly increases Tau toxicity in neuronal cells, Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis 1863, 414-427.

[3] Roman, A. Y., Devred, F., Byrne, D., La Rocca, R., Ninkina, N. N., Peyrot, V., and Tsvetkov, P. O. (2018) Zinc Induces Temperature-Dependent Reversible Self-Assembly of Tau, J Mol Biol.

Author Response

Response: The discussion and references have been incorporated into the revised manuscript in red.

1) Physiological concentration of free Zn2+ in cells is between 1 nM and 10 nM, but in AD brains, Zn2+ is enriched and its intracellular concentrations can be in the range of 10-300 μM. [1] Therefore, the binding constant obtained in this study is reasonable. (lines 10-13, Page 10 in the revised manuscript)

(1) Sensi, S. L.et al, Zinc in the physiology and pathology of the CNS. Nat Rev Neurosci 2009, 10, (11), 780-91.

2) Full length tau has two Cys (C291 and C322) residues, which were located in R2 and R3 fragments, respectively. Zn2+ bound to full length tau by interacting with C291 and C322, with the stoichiometry value n = 1 and binding constant exceeding 106 M-1. [2, 3] When Cys291 was mutated to Ala, the binding number and dissociation constant were decreased to 0.44 and 9.71 μM, respectively, [4] which were much comparable with the values obtained with tau-R3 in this study. In addition, Zn2+ also accelerated the fibrillization of full length tau and induced tau to form shorter fibrillar aggregates. [2, 3] ( lines 13-18 & lines 25-26, Page 10 in the revised manuscript

(2) Roman, A. Y.et al., Zinc Induces Temperature-Dependent Reversible Self-Assembly of Tau. Journal of molecular biology 2018.

(3) Hu, J. Y.et al., Pathological concentration of zinc dramatically accelerates abnormal aggregation of full-length human Tau and thereby significantly increases Tau toxicity in neuronal cells. Biochimica et biophysica acta. 2017, 1863, (2), 414-427.

(4) Mo, Z. Y. et al. Low micromolar zinc accelerates the fibrillization of human tau via bridging of Cys-291 and Cys-322. J Biol Chem 2009, 284, (50), 34648-57.

Reviewer 2 Report

Interesting and well documented experimental study demonstrating that Zn2+ can aggravate tau-R3 aggregation and neurotoxicity, ading further clues to understand the relationship between Zn2+ dyshomeostasis and AD etiology.

As far as I can consider, the paper is original, based on personal experimental studies of the authors showing the influence of ZN2+ on 3R tau morphology, its toxicity to neurons, thus presenting a hypothecial model how Zn2+ aggravates 3R-tau aggregation and toxicity, suggesting an involvement of Zn2+ in the pathogenesis of AD.

Additional reference could be given to the effect of Zn on Aß aggregation in its interaction with tau protein (Beyer N et al, JAlzheimers Dis 2012;29:863-73; Jellinger KA, Int Rev Neurobiol 2013;110:1-47).

Author Response

Response:

1) A necessary reference recommended by the reviewer was added at the end of the sentence “The dynamic imbalance of metal ions such as Cu2+, Fe3+, Zn2+, and Ca2+ in the brain is closely related to the pathogenic mechanism of AD”. (Jellinger KA, Int Rev Neurobiol 2013;110:1-47) (line 13Page 2 in the revised manuscript)

       2) According to reviewer’s comments, some introduction and a reference was added! It was found that the mRNA levels of Zn2+ transporters including LIV1, ZIP1, ZnT1, ZnT4, and ZnT6 were increased in the cortex of postmortem brain tissues from AD patients, increasing the likelihood of interactions between Zn2+ and Aβ or tau protein in the brains. (Beyer, N.; Coulson, D. T.; Heggarty, S.; Ravid, R.; Hellemans, J.; Irvine, G. B.; Johnston, J. A., Zinc transporter mRNA levels in Alzheimer's disease postmortem brain. Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD 2012, 29, (4), 863-73.) (lines 26-29Page 2 in the revised manuscript)

Back to TopTop