| Literature DB >> 18480256 |
Huan Wang1, Martin L Duennwald, Blake E Roberts, Leslie M Rozeboom, Yingxin L Zhang, Andrew D Steele, Rajaraman Krishnan, Linhui Julie Su, Drees Griffin, Samrat Mukhopadhyay, Edward J Hennessy, Peter Weigele, Barbara J Blanchard, Jonathan King, Ashok A Deniz, Stephen L Buchwald, Vernon M Ingram, Susan Lindquist, James Shorter.
Abstract
Mechanisms to safely eliminate amyloids and preamyloid oligomers associated with many devastating diseases are urgently needed. Biophysical principles dictate that small molecules are unlikely to perturb large intermolecular protein-protein interfaces, let alone extraordinarily stable amyloid interfaces. Yet 4,5-dianilinophthalimide (DAPH-1) reverses Abeta42 amyloidogenesis and neurotoxicity, which is associated with Alzheimer's disease. Here, we show that DAPH-1 and select derivatives are ineffective against several amyloidogenic proteins, including tau, alpha-synuclein, Ure2, and PrP, but antagonize the yeast prion protein, Sup35, in vitro and in vivo. This allowed us to exploit several powerful new tools created for studying the conformational transitions of Sup35 and decipher the mechanisms by which DAPH-1 and related compounds antagonize the prion state. During fibrillization, inhibitory DAPHs alter the folding of Sup35's amyloidogenic core, preventing amyloidogenic oligomerization and specific recognition events that nucleate prion assembly. Select DAPHs also are capable of attacking preformed amyloids. They remodel Sup35 prion-specific intermolecular interfaces to create morphologically altered aggregates with diminished infectivity and self-templating activity. Our studies provide mechanistic insights and reinvigorate hopes for small-molecule therapies that specifically disrupt intermolecular amyloid contacts.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18480256 PMCID: PMC2438221 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0801934105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205