Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a fatal, progressive dementia for which there is no cure and for which a molecular basis has yet to be established. However, considerable evidence suggests that AD is linked to neurotoxic assemblies of the 42-amino-acid peptide amyloid beta (Abeta). There is now a clear body of evidence that shows this neurotoxicity resides not only in insoluble fibrils of Abeta but also in soluble Abeta ADDLs (Abeta-derived diffusible ligands) and larger protofibrils. Further, anti-Abeta antibodies have been reported to reverse memory failure in human amyloid precursor protein (hAPP)-expressed transgenic mice in a manner that suggests symptom reversal is attributable to targeting of ADDLs. Clearly, a search for drugs targeting the assembly of these soluble Abeta species represents a new and potentially important approach to the treatment of AD. In this work we describe the development of a dot-blot immunoassay to measure ADDL at the femtomole level, its use in defining the time course of ADDL formation, and its use in determining the presence of ADDLs in the hAPP transgenic mouse brain. Discussion of a protocol to screen agents for inhibition of neurotoxic ADDLformation both in vivo and in vitro is also presented. The methods are suitable for screening combinatorial libraries and, importantly, provide the potential for simultaneous information on candidate transport across the blood-brain barrier.
Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia in older individuals with compelling evidence favoring neuron dysfunction and death triggered by assembled forms of A beta(1-42). While large neurotoxic amyloid fibrils have been known for years, recent studies show that soluble protofibril and A beta(1-42)-derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs) may also be involved in neurotoxicity. In the present work, dot-blot immunoassays discriminating ADDLs from monomers were used to screen libraries of per-substituted beta-cyclodextrin (beta-CD) derivatives for inhibition of ADDLs formation. Libraries were prepared from per-6-iodo-beta-CD by treatment with various amine nucleophiles. The most active library tested (containing >2000 derivatives) was derived from imidazole, N, N-dimethylethylenediamine and furfurylamine, which at 10 microM total library, inhibited ADDLs formation (10 nM A beta(1-42)) over a period of 4 hours. The latter was confirmed by a western blot assay showing decreased amounts of the initially formed A beta(1-42) tetramer. These preliminary experiments suggest that derivatized forms of beta-CD can interfere with the oligomerization process of A beta(1-42).
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