| Literature DB >> 27504670 |
Wei Zhou1,2, Guifa Zhong1, Sihai Fu3, Hui Xie4, Tianyan Chi5, Luyi Li5, Xiurong Rao1, Shaogao Zeng1, Dengfeng Xu1, Hao Wang1, Guoqing Sheng1, Xing Ji3, Xiaorong Liu1, Xuefei Ji5, Donghai Wu1, Libo Zou5, Micky Tortorella1, Kejian Zhang3, Wenhui Hu1.
Abstract
Currently, anti-AD drug discovery using target-based approaches is extremely challenging due to unclear etiology of AD and absence of validated therapeutic protein targets. Neuronal death, regardless of causes, plays a key role in AD progression, and it is directly linked to neuroinflammation. Meanwhile, phenotypic screening is making a resurgence in drug discovery process as an alternative to target-focused approaches. Herein, we employed microglia-based phenotypic screenings to search for small molecules that modulate the release of detrimental proinflammatory cytokines. The identified novel pharmacological inhibitor of neuroinflammation (named GIBH-130) was validated to alter phenotypes of neuroinflammation in AD brains. Notably, this molecule exhibited comparable in vivo efficacy of cognitive impairment relief to donepezil and memantine respectively in both β amyloid-induced and APP/PS1 double transgenic Alzheimer's murine models at a substantially lower dose (0.25 mg/kg). Therefore, GIBH-130 constitutes a unique chemical probe for pathogenesis research and drug development of AD, and it also suggests microglia-based phenotypic screenings that target neuroinflammation as an effective and feasible strategy to identify novel anti-AD agents.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; animal models; inhibitor; neuroinflammation
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27504670 DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.6b00125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Chem Neurosci ISSN: 1948-7193 Impact factor: 4.418