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Small tau aggregates exhibit disease-specific molecular profiles across tauopathies
Tauopathies are neurodegenerative diseases marked by pathological tau aggregation. While disease-specific folds of insoluble tau filaments have been established, it remains unclear whether the smaller, earlier species also differ across tauopathies. Here, we characterise these small tau aggregates from post-mortem brain of individuals with Alzheimer's disease (AD), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), corticobasal degeneration, Pick's disease, and healthy controls. Using two complementary single-molecule assays, we confirm that small tau aggregates vary in abundance, morphology, and post-translational modifications. AD features specific long, fibrillar-shaped aggregates enriched in phospho-epitopes, while PSP aggregates are shorter, round, and selectively phosphorylated at serine-356, a site we identify as correlating with markers of inflammation and apoptosis. Aggregate properties co-vary with cellular stress signatures and align with disease-specific seeding profiles, suggesting distinct pathological mechanisms. These findings suggest that small tau aggregates are not a shared intermediate, but instead encode disease-specific mechanisms, with potential as both biomarkers and therapeutic targets.
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