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Contact: Gina Kirchweger
kirchweger@salk.edu
858-453-4100 x1340
Salk Institute

Stress and Tau Phosphorylation

Caption: Top left: In unstressed animals the hippocampus, which is involved in the formation of memories and learning, is free of phosphorylated tau. Top right: Subjecting mice to low-level chronic emotional stress -- the kind we experience in everyday life—leads to widespread tau phosphorylation, a key step in the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (black streaks), one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease. Bottom: While acute stress effects are reversible, repeated stress leads to cumulative increases in phosphorylated tau, a portion of which is sequestered in an insoluble, and potentially pathogenic, form.

Credit: Image courtesy of Dr. Paul E. Sawchenko and Dr. Robert A. Rissman, Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Related news release: A possible mechanistic link between stress and the development of Alzheimer tangles


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