| Literature DB >> 29311768 |
Kevin A Clayton1, Alicia A Van Enoo1, Tsuneya Ikezu1,2.
Abstract
Brain aging is central to late-onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD), although the mechanisms by which it occurs at protein or cellular levels are not fully understood. Alzheimer's disease is the most common proteopathy and is characterized by two unique pathologies: senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, the former accumulating earlier than the latter. Aging alters the proteostasis of amyloid-β peptides and microtubule-associated protein tau, which are regulated in both autonomous and non-autonomous manners. Microglia, the resident phagocytes of the central nervous system, play a major role in the non-autonomous clearance of protein aggregates. Their function is significantly altered by aging and neurodegeneration. This is genetically supported by the association of microglia-specific genes, TREM2 and CD33, and late onset Alzheimer's disease. Here, we propose that the functional characterization of microglia, and their contribution to proteopathy, will lead to a new therapeutic direction in Alzheimer's disease research.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; amyloid-beta peptide; microglia; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; proteopathy; tau protein
Year: 2017 PMID: 29311768 PMCID: PMC5733046 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
A comprehensive list of all of the drugs in clinical development that aim to reduce either Aβ pathology, tau pathology, or inflammation within the past five years categorized by treatment strategy and drug class.
| Inflammation | Anti-inflammatories (Ferretti et al., | Anti-inflammatories act through a variety of interactions. | Cromoglicic acid | Approved (alternate indication) |
| ALZT-OP1 | Approved (alternate indication) | |||
| CHF 5074 | Phase 2 | |||
| RAGE Antagonists (Srikanth et al., | RAGE increases pathogenic pro-inflammatory signaling in diabetes, AD, and cancer. Antagonists may alleviate the deleterious effects, but may also reduce amyloid deposition. | Rilapladib ALZT-OP1 | Phase 2 Phase 3 | |
| GSK2647544 | Phase 1 | |||
| Minocycline | Approved (alternate indication) | |||
| Azeliragon | Phase 3 | |||
| Tumor necrosis factor alpha inhibitor (Butchart et al., | Traditionally a cancer drug, Etanercept may lower the effects of heightened levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha and deleterious inflammation. | Etanercept | Approved (alternate indication) | |
| Tau-related pathology | Microtubule Stabilizers (Mitchell et al., | Dysfunction of phosphorylated tau results in impaired microtubule stabilizing function, synaptic shrinkage, and eventually neuronal death. Microtubule-stabilizing agents may alleviate the deficit caused by tau phosphorylation. | TPI-287 | Phase 1 |
| Inhibitors of Tau Aggregation (Harrington et al., | Small molecules that bind pathological versions of tau and prevent aggregation may help reduce overall toxicity. | TRx0237 | Phase 3 | |
| Vaccine against Tau (Theunis et al., | Use second-generation immunotherapy to stimulate the brains innate immune system to increase neurofibrillary tangle clearance. | AADvac1 ACI-35 | Phase 2 Phase 1 | |
| Src/abl family of kinases inhibitor (Nygaard et al., | Fyn phosphorylates tau after exposure to pathogenic Aβ. Therefore, inhibitors may prevent or reduce the generation of pathological tau. | Saracatinib | Phase 2 | |
| Antibodies against Tau | Antibodies against pathogenic Tau seek to utilize the brain's natural immune system to clear Aβ faster. | ABBV-8E12 | Phase 2 | |
| RO7105705 | Phase 1 | |||
| Reduction in Aβ | BACE Inhibitors (He et al., | Inhibits the action of pathogenic β-secretase cleavage of APP, reducing overall amyloid burden. | AZD3293 | Phase 3 |
| JNJ-54861911 | Phase 2/3 | |||
| LY3202626 | Phase 2 | |||
| CNP520 | Phase 2/3 | |||
| E2609 | Phase 3 | |||
| Antibodies against Aβ (Bard et al., | Antibodies against pathogenic Aβ seek to utilize the brain's natural immune system to clear Aβ faster. | BAN2401 | Phase 2 | |
| Gantenerumab | Phase 3 | |||
| GSK933776 | Phase 2 | |||
| LY3002813 | Phase 1 | |||
| LY3303560 | Phase 1 | |||
| MEDI1814 | Phase 1 | |||
| SAR228810 | Phase 1 | |||
| AAB-003 | Phase 1 | |||
| Aducanumab | Phase 3 | |||
| Crenezumab | Phase 3 | |||
| Gamunex | Approved (alternate indication) | |||
| KHK6640 | Phase 1 | |||
| Small Molecule Aβ inhibitors (McLaurin et al., | Small molecules are believed to either bind Aβ42 and Aβ40 peptides early, preventing nucleation, or inhibiting organization of higher-level tertiary and quaternary structures. | ELND005 | Phase 2 | |
| RXR-selective analogues (Tai et al., | These receptors ameliorate loss-of-function associated with ApoE, decreasing Aβ burden and improving synaptic viability. | Bexarotene | Approved (alternate indication) | |
| Phosphodiesterase 9 Inhibitors (Su et al., | PDE9 inhibitors halt Aβ aggregation, thus reducing abundance and associated toxicity of senile plaques. | BI 409306 BPN14770 | Phase 2 Phase 1 | |
| Beta amyloid vaccines (Wiessner et al., | Using second-generation immunotherapy to stimulate the brain's innate immune system to increase Aβ clearance. | CAD106 | Phase 2/3 | |
| MER5101 | Phase 1 | |||
| UB-311 | Phase 2 | |||
| ACI-24 | Phase 1/2 | |||
| Purinoceptor P2Y6 agonists (Koizumi et al., | Stimulation of the P2Y6 receptor increases microglia phagocytosis and associated clearance of Aβ. | GC021109 | Phase 1 | |
| Gamma Secretase Modulators (Imbimbo et al., | Modulate γ-secretase to process pathological Aβ42 more readily into non-toxic forms. | NGP 555 CHF 5074 EVP-0962 | Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 2 | |
| Inhibitors of Aβ synthesis (Maccecchini et al., | Binding of APP mRNA prevents translation, thus reducing amyloid burden in the subject. | Posiphen | Phase 1/2 | |
| Sigma 2 receptor ligands (Izzo et al., | These ligands bind to the sigma 2 receptor, inhibiting binding of Aβ fragments and associated synaptic toxicity. | CT1812 | Phase 1/2 | |
| Glutaminyl cyclase inhibitors (Morawski et al., | Glutaminyl cyclase is a metalloenzyme that catalyzes the cyclization of pathogenic Aβ, forming pGlu-Ab, which is a highly toxic constituent of senile plaques. | PQ912 | Phase 2 | |
| Dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker | Serves as an anti-hypertensive with Aβ deposition prevention properties (Paris, 2010). | Nilvadine | Phase 3 | |
| SNRI (Chalermpalanupap et al., | Reducing NET activity has the potential to reduce amyloid burden. | Atomoxetine | Phase 2 |
Drugs in green are already approved by the FDA for a condition separate from AD. Drugs in red have been granted Fast Track privileges for AD clinical development.
Figure 1Described are five steps of apoptotic cell clearance via phagocytes. Trace chemicals and molecules associated with cell necrosis and apoptosis stimulate the chemotaxis of phagocytes up their concentration gradient to the source. From there, the phagocyte engulfs the apoptotic debris and begins degradation. Eventually, it will release anti-inflammatory and reparative signals such as TGF-β, IL-10, and PGE2. In neurodegenerative diseases of protein aggregation, protein seed aggregates are packaged into exosomes where they can be shuttled to different regions of the CNS.
Figure 2Three common microglia phenotypes are described. Homeostatic microglia are found in the adult brain under non-infectious, non-diseased, and non-aged conditions, exhibiting robust expression of homeostatic microglial markers: Tmem119, P2ry12, Tgfbr1, and transcription factor Sall1. During normal aging, homeostatic markers gradually decline, resulting in reduced functional aspects, including proliferation, phagocytosis, ramification, and cytokine secretion. Finally, there is a distinct microglia phenotype that is associated with neurodegeneration that possesses a more exacerbated dystrophic phenotype, but is specifically associated with plaques and dystrophic neurites that cause neurodegeneration.