| Literature DB >> 30445265 |
Ahmed Karam Farag1, Ahmed H E Hassan2, Hyeanjeong Jeong3, Youngji Kwon4, Jin Gyu Choi5, Myung Sook Oh4, Ki Duk Park6, Yun Kyung Kim7, Eun Joo Roh8.
Abstract
Kinase irregularity has been correlated with several complex neurodegenerative tauopathies. Development of selective inhibitors of these kinases might afford promising anti-tauopathy therapies. While DAPK1 inhibitors halt the formation of tau aggregates and counteract neuronal death, CSF1R inhibitors could alleviate the tauopathies-associated neuroinflammation. Herein, we report the design, synthesis, biological evaluation, mechanistic study, and molecular docking study of novel CSF1R/DAPK1 dual inhibitors as multifunctional molecules inhibiting the formation of tau aggregates and neuroinflammation. Compound 3l, the most potent DAPK1 inhibitor in the in vitro kinase assay (IC50 = 1.25 μM) was the most effective tau aggregates formation inhibitor in the cellular assay (IC50 = 5.0 μM). Also, compound 3l elicited potent inhibition of CSF1R in the in vitro kinase assay (IC50 = 0.15 μM) and promising inhibition of nitric oxide production in LPS-induced BV-2 cells (55% inhibition at 10 μM concentration). Kinase profiling and hERG binding assay anticipated the absence of off-target toxicities while the PAMPA-BBB assay predicted potentially high BBB permeability. The mechanistic study and selectivity profile suggest compound 3l as a non-ATP-competitive DAPK1 inhibitor and an ATP-competitive CSF1R inhibitor while the in silico calculations illustrated binding of compound 3l to the substrate-binding site of DAPK1. Hence, compound 3l might act as a protein-protein interaction inhibitor by hindering DAPK1 kinase reaction through preventing the binding of DAPK1 substrates.Entities:
Keywords: CSF1R; DAPK1; Multifunctional molecules; Neuroinflammation; Tauopathies
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30445265 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.10.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Chem ISSN: 0223-5234 Impact factor: 6.514