Literature DB >> 34115933

"Turn-On" Quinoline-Based Fluorescent Probe for Selective Imaging of Tau Aggregates in Alzheimer's Disease: Rational Design, Synthesis, and Molecular Docking.

Ahmed A Elbatrawy1,2, Seung Jae Hyeon3, Nan Yue4, Essam Eldin A Osman5, Seung Hyeo Choi3, Sungsu Lim6, Yun Kyung Kim2,6, Hoon Ryu3,7, Mengchao Cui4, Ghilsoo Nam1,2.   

Abstract

Tau aggregation is believed to have a strong association with the level of cognitive deficits in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Thus, optical brain imaging of tau aggregates has recently gained substantial attention as a promising tool for the early diagnosis of AD. However, selective imaging of tau aggregates is a major challenge due to sharing similar β-sheet structures with homologous Aβ fibrils. Herein, four quinoline-based fluorescent probes (Q-tau) were judiciously designed using the donor-acceptor architecture for selective imaging of tau aggregates. In particular, probe Q-tau 4 exhibited a strong intramolecular charge transfer and favorable photophysical profile, such as a large Stokes' shift and fluorescence emission wavelength of 630 nm in the presence of tau aggregates. The probe also displayed a "turn-on" fluorescence behavior toward tau fibrils with a 3.5-fold selectivity versus Aβ fibrils. In addition, Q-tau 4 exhibited nanomolar binding affinity to tau aggregates (Kd = 16.6 nM), which was 1.4 times higher than that for Aβ fibrils. The mechanism of "turn-on" fluorescence was proposed to be an environment-sensitive molecular rotor-like response. Moreover, ex vivo labeling of human AD brain sections demonstrated favorable colocalization of Q-tau 4 and the phosphorylated tau antibody, while comparable limited staining was observed with Aβ fibrils. Molecular docking was conducted to obtain insights into the tau-binding mode of the probe. Collectively, Q-tau 4 has successfully been used as a tau-specific fluorescent imaging agent with lower background interference.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Alzheimer’s disease; Aβ fibrils; fluorescence imaging; molecular rotation; tau protein

Year:  2021        PMID: 34115933     DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.1c00338

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Sens        ISSN: 2379-3694            Impact factor:   7.711


  2 in total

1.  Rational design and synthesis of a novel BODIPY-based probe for selective imaging of tau tangles in human iPSC-derived cortical neurons.

Authors:  Alessandro Soloperto; Deborah Quaglio; Paola Baiocco; Isabella Romeo; Mattia Mori; Matteo Ardini; Caterina Presutti; Ida Sannino; Silvia Ghirga; Antonia Iazzetti; Rodolfo Ippoliti; Giancarlo Ruocco; Bruno Botta; Francesca Ghirga; Silvia Di Angelantonio; Alberto Boffi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Non-invasive imaging of tau-targeted probe uptake by whole brain multi-spectral optoacoustic tomography.

Authors:  Patrick Vagenknecht; Artur Luzgin; Maiko Ono; Bin Ji; Makoto Higuchi; Daniela Noain; Cinzia A Maschio; Jens Sobek; Zhenyue Chen; Uwe Konietzko; Juan A Gerez; Roland Riek; Daniel Razansky; Jan Klohs; Roger M Nitsch; Xose Luis Dean-Ben; Ruiqing Ni
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2022-02-07       Impact factor: 10.057

  2 in total

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