How do copper(ii) and zinc(ii) bind to tau protein, and how might this promote aggregation?

Abstract

Neurodegenerative tauopathies are characterized by extracellular protein deposits of amyloid-β and the intracellular aggregates of hyperphosphorylated tau in the brain. A great number of publications support that essential metal ions (such as zinc and copper) play an important role in the development of neurodegeneration. The histidine imidazole rings are frequent metal binding sites in proteins, and tau is relatively rich in this moiety. The 12 histidyl residues of the protein are well separated and can be found in different chemical environments; hence, their metal binding properties differ, at least slightly. The comparison of the metal binding affinity of the His32 moiety from the N-terminal part of tau with that of the His329–His330 residues from the R3 domain revealed that His32 is a more favourable binding site for copper(II) ions than the adjacent histidine residues in neutral medium, while the His329–His330 moieties provide a binding site for zinc(II) ions at physiological pH. To further elucidate the metal binding ability of His32 and His329–His330, we studied the complex formation processes of a chimeric peptide (Ac-TMHQDNIHHKP-NH2) that contains the 30–34 residues (TMHQD) linked to the 327–332 residues (NIHHKP) in a single molecule (tau(30–34)(327–332)). The pH potentiometric, spectroscopic (UV-Vis and CD) and mass spectrometry studies on the copper(II) complexes of the peptide revealed that in equimolar samples, predominantly mononuclear complexes with 1 : 1 stoichiometry are formed. At physiological pH and in alkaline samples, the His32 imidazole nitrogen becomes the main, albeit not exclusive, anchoring group. The coordination mode of these copper(II) complexes involves imidazole-N donor atoms and deprotonated amide functions. In the presence of zinc(II) ions, only mononuclear species are formed. The results obtained for the mixed copper(II)–zinc(II) complexes indicate that the N-terminal imidazole nitrogen (His32) is the main anchoring group for copper(II) ions, while zinc(II) is accumulated at one of the adjacent histidyl residues if both metal ions are present in the solution at physiological pH. These findings are in agreement with the hypothesis that zinc(II), by binding to the R3 region, aggravates the aggregation processes of the R3 region and may increase the tau's toxicity.

Graphical abstract: How do copper(ii) and zinc(ii) bind to tau protein, and how might this promote aggregation?

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Dec 2025
Accepted
10 Mar 2026
First published
12 Mar 2026

Dalton Trans., 2026, Advance Article

How do copper(II) and zinc(II) bind to tau protein, and how might this promote aggregation?

B. D. Balogh, G. Di Natale, G. Pappalardo and K. Várnagy, Dalton Trans., 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5DT03057A

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