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Abstracts
Activation of
p38 kinase links tau phosphorylation, oxidative stress, and cell cycle-related
events in Alzheimer disease.
Zhu X, Rottkamp CA, Boux H, Takeda A, Perry G, Smith MA.
The temporal association between oxidative stress and the hallmark pathologies of Alzheimer disease (AD)
demonstrates that oxidative stress is among the earliest events in the disease.
Nonetheless, neither the consequences of oxidative stress nor how oxidative
stress relates to other pathological features of the disease are clear at this
point. To begin to address these issues, we investigated p38 kinase, which is
induced by oxidative stress, in the pathogenesis of AD. In hippocampal and
cortical brain regions of individuals with AD, p38 is exclusively localized in
association with neurofibrillar pathology. By marked contrast, these brain
regions exhibit a low level of diffuse p38 staining in the neuronal cytoplasm
in controls. We found a complete overlap of the immunostaining profiles of p38
and tau-positive neurofibrillary pathology and that the majority of p38 was
activated in AD neurons, both of which support an association of p38 with the
disease process. Moreover, the finding that PHF-tau co-immunoprecipitates with
p38, and that p38 co-purifies with PHF-tau, strongly suggests that they are
physically associated in vivo. Since p38 is also implicated in cell cycle
regulation, our findings provide a link between the cell cycle re-entrant
phenotype, cytoskeletal phosphorylation and oxidative stress in AD.
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