Background
Table 1 Examples of tauopathies and synucleinopathies- clinical manifestation and pathological features |
| Type of proteinopathy | Disease | Clinical manifestation | Protein/cell type/ pathology | Main affected regions in the CNS and PNS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Synucleinopathy | Parkinson's disease [25] | Non-motor symptoms, tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia | α-syn/neurons/Lewy bodies (LBs) and Lewy neurites (LNs) | Substantia nigra, basal ganglia |
| Lewy body dementia [26, 27] | Visual hallucinations, cognitive decline, difficulty walking, rigidity | α-syn/neurons/LBs and LNs | Cortical and subcortical region | |
| Multiple system atrophy [28, 29] | Slowness of movement, stiffness, cerebellar ataxia, autonomic failure | α-syn/oligodendrocytes/GCIs | Basal ganglia, cerebellum, pons, spinal cord | |
| Pure autonomic failure [30] | Orthostatic hypotension, autonomic failure, RBD | α-syn/neurons/LBs and LNs | Autonomic nerves and ganglia, nigra, locus coeruleus | |
| Primary tauopathy | Cortiobasal degeneration [31] | Apraxia, dystonia, lack of balance, stiffness, dementia | 4R tau/glia and neurons/ballooned neurons, pretangles, coiled bodies | Cortex and basal ganglia |
| Pick's disease [32] | Dementia with frontotemporal degeneration | 3R tau/glia and neurons/Pick bodies, ballooned neurons | Cortex and hippocampus | |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy [33] | Ocular motor dysfunction, postural instability, akinesia, dementia | 4R tau/glia and neurons/NFTs, globose tangles, tufted astrocytes, coiled bodies | Cortex, basal ganglia, brainstem | |
| Chronic traumatic encephalopathy [34, 35] | “Dementia pugilistica” Headaches, dementia, abnormal gait, depression, related to TBI | 3R/4R tau/neurons and glia/NFTs | Cortex, basal ganglia, brainstem, depths of cerebral sulci | |
| Primary age-related tauopathy [36] | “Tangle-only dementia” | 3R/4R tau/neurons/NFTs | Cortex, brainstem, olfactory bulb | |
| Secondary tauopathy | Alzheimer's disease [37] | Dementia, with random motor deficits and personality changes | 3R/4R tau/neurons/NFTs, plaques, neuropil threads | Hippocampus, limbic, entorhinal cortex, neocortex |
Genetic overlap between tauopathies and synucleinopathies
MAPT in tauopathies
Fig. 1 A schematic showing mutations of MAPT and composition of tau isoforms. The H1 and H2 haplotypes are formed by the 900 kb inversion in the q21.3 region of chromosome 17. The H1 haplotype is often the one contributing to disease initiation due to multiple missense mutations from exon 1 to 13, especially on exon 10. The tau protein can be classified into 6 isoforms depending on the number of amino inserts (0N, 1N, 2N) on exons 2 and 3 and the number of microtubule-binding domains (3R, 4R). Exon 10 encodes the R2 domain, and its alternative splicing produces 3R or 4R tau isoforms. The microtubule-binding domain contains hexapeptide motifs VQIINK in R2 and VQIVYK in R3. Interactions between the two motifs promote dimer formation of tau [1,2,73] |
SNCA in synucleinopathy
MAPT and SNCA correlate in the onset of proteinopathies
Structural basis for the formation of tau and α-syn pathology
Structural basis for tau aggregation
Structural basis for α-syn aggregation
Fig. 2 Structure, mutations and PTMs of α-syn protein. α-Syn has three domains: the amphipathic N-terminus, the non-amyloid-β component (NAC) which is prone to aggregate, and the acidic C-terminus. Common point mutations of α-syn are A30P, E46K, H50Q, G51D, A53T and A53E. The PTMs of α-syn mainly include phosphorylation, nitration, acetylation, ubiquitination and SUMOylation [43,162] |
Fig. 3 Processes of tau and α-syn aggregation. Under pathological conditions, α-syn accumulates and forms the β-sheet structure in the cytoplasm, which then becomes an amyloid fibrillary structure, the main component of LBs. On the other hand, tau monomers become hyperphosphorylated and form numeric molecules, which then aggregate into protofilaments and form PHFs, eventually becoming NFTs |
Tau and α-syn pathology spreading
Pathological continuum between tauopathies and synucleinopathies
Co-occurrence of tau and α-syn pathology
Tau/α-syn co-aggregates in pathology spreading
Possible mechanisms underlying the formation of tau and α-syn co-pathology
Fig. 4 Mechanisms of co-pathology formation between tau and α-syn. We propose three possible models of tau and α-syn co-pathology formation in neurons. (1) Tau and α-syn monomers directly bind to each other and form co-aggregates (left), (2) tau or α-syn aggregates serve as the template and initiate elongation with monomers of the other protein, a process termed cross-seeding (middle); and (3) tau and α-syn aggregate independently from each other in the same neurons |

