Biophysical and mechanistic impacts of small molecule and polyanionic aggregation modulators on tau4RD

dc.contributor.advisorNath, Abhinav
dc.contributor.advisorGuttman, Miklos
dc.contributor.authorJames, Ellie
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-12T22:43:34Z
dc.date.issued2025-05-12
dc.date.submitted2025
dc.descriptionThesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
dc.description.abstractTau is an intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) that pathologically aggregates in Alzheimer's disease and over twenty other neurodegenerative diseases known as tauopathies. Unlike structured proteins that exhibit one (or several) folded conformations, IDPs populate dynamic and interchanging conformational ensembles. This makes IDPs difficult to study structurally and challenging as drug targets. During aggregation, tau's ensemble is perturbed so that the disordered monomers assemble into ordered cross-beta-sheet amyloid structures. Recent advances in cryo-EM have revealed that many of the amyloid fibrils generated in different tauopathies display disease-specific morphologies. These morphologies are reproducible through prion-like seeding both in vivo and in vitro. While these observations imply that tau has a tunable self-assembly landscape, the structural and kinetic mechanisms that control tau's amyloid morphology remain unclear. Further, there could be great therapeutic potential in targeting species early in tau's aggregation pathway; aggregation intermediates (i.e., mid-stage oligomers) are considered toxic in neurodegenerative disease. Here, we describe the discovery and characterization of tryptanthrin and its synthetic analogs as extremely potent tau inhibitors that target the earliest stages of aggregation. We follow this with a pulsed hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) investigation into the origins of tau's amyloid heterogeneity and find evidence that distinct amyloid morphologies are encoded at the start of aggregation. Together, these findings address critical open questions regarding drug development for IDPs and the timeline of amyloid structural divergence.
dc.embargo.lift2026-05-12T22:43:34Z
dc.embargo.termsRestrict to UW for 1 year -- then make Open Access
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherJames_washington_0250E_27965.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1773/52920
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-SA
dc.subjectAmyloid
dc.subjectHDX
dc.subjectIDP
dc.subjectTau
dc.subjectBiophysics
dc.subjectPharmaceutical sciences
dc.subjectBiochemistry
dc.subject.otherMolecular engineering
dc.titleBiophysical and mechanistic impacts of small molecule and polyanionic aggregation modulators on tau4RD
dc.typeThesis

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