We have developed a high-throughput drug discovery platform, measuring fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) with fluorescent alpha-synuclein (αSN) biosensors, to detect spontaneous pre-fibrillar oligomers in living cells. Our two αSN FRET biosensors provide complementary insight into αSN oligomerization and conformation in order to improve the success of drug discovery campaigns for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. We measure FRET by fluorescence lifetime, rather than traditional fluorescence intensity, providing a structural readout with greater resolution and precision. This facilitates identification of compounds that cause subtle but significant conformational changes in the ensemble of oligomeric states that are easily missed using intensity-based FRET. We screened a 1280-compound small-molecule library and identified 21 compounds that changed the lifetime by >5 SD. Two of these compounds have nanomolar potency in protecting SH-SY5Y cells from αSN-induced death, providing a nearly tenfold improvement over known inhibitors. We tested the efficacy of several compounds in a primary mouse neuron assay of αSN pathology (phosphorylation of mouse αSN pre-formed fibrils) and show rescue of pathology for two of them. These hits were further characterized with biophysical and biochemical assays to explore potential mechanisms of action. In vitro αSN oligomerization, single-molecule FRET, and protein-observed fluorine NMR experiments demonstrate that these compounds modulate αSN oligomers but not monomers. Subsequent aggregation assays further show that these compounds also deter or block αSN fibril assembly.
Recent high-resolution structures of alpha-synuclein (aSyn) fibrils offer promise for rational approaches to drug discovery for Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia. Harnessing the first such structures, we previously used molecular dynamics and free energy calculations to suggest that threonines 72 and 75which line water-filled cavities within the fibril stacksmay be of central importance in stabilizing fibrils. Here, we used experimental mutagenesis of both wild-type and A53T aSyn to show that both threonine residues play important but surprisingly disparate roles in fibril nucleation and elongation. The T72A mutant, but not T75A, resulted in a large increase in the extent of fibrillization during primary nucleation, leading us to posit that T72 acts as a “brake” on run-away aggregation. An expanded set of simulations of five recent high-resolution fibril structures suggests that confinement of cavity waters around T72 correlates with this finding. In contrast, the T75A mutation led to a modest decrease in the extent of fibrillization. Furthermore, both T72A and T75A completely blocked the initial fibril elongation in seeded fibrillization. To test whether these threonine-lined cavities are druggable targets, we used computational docking to identify potential small-molecule binders. We show that the top-scoring hit, aprepitant, strongly promotes fibril growth while specifically interacting with aSyn fibrils and not monomer, and we offer speculation as to how such compounds could be used therapeutically.
1H,15N-Heteronuclear Single Quantum Coherence (HSQC) NMR is a powerful technique that has been employed to characterize small-molecule interactions with intrinsically disordered monomeric α-Synuclein (aSyn). We report how solution pH can impact the interpretation of aSyn HSQC NMR spectra and demonstrate that small-molecule formulations (e.g., complexation with acidic salts) can lower sample pH and confound interpretation of drug binding and concomitant protein structural changes. Through stringent pH control, we confirm that several previously identified compounds (EGCG, Baicalin, and Dopamine (DOPA)) as well as a series of potent small-molecule inhibitors of aSyn pathology (Demeclocycline, Ro90-7501, and (±)-Bay K 8644) are capable of direct target engagement of aSyn. Previously, DOPA–aSyn interactions have been shown to elicit a dramatic chemical shift perturbation (CSP) localized to aSyn’s H50 at low DOPA concentrations then expanding to aSyn’s acidic C-terminal residues at increasing DOPA levels. Interestingly, this CSP profile mirrors our pH titration, where a small reduction in pH affects H50 CSP, and large pH changes induce robust C-terminal CSP. In contrast, under tightly controlled pH 5.0, DOPA induces significant CSPs observed at both ionizable and nonionizable residues. These results suggest that previous interpretations of DOPA–aSyn interactions were conflated with pH-induced CSP, highlighting the need for stringent pH control to minimize potential false-positive interpretations of ligand interactions in HSQC NMR experiments. Furthermore, DOPA’s preferential interaction with aSyn under acidic pH represents a novel understanding of DOPA–aSyn interactions that may provide insight into the potential gain of toxic function of aSyn misfolding in α-synucleinopathies.
Proteasomal degradation of intrinsically disordered proteins, such as tau, is a critical component of proteostasis in both ageing and neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we investigated proteasomal activation by MK886 (MK). We previously identi ed MK as a lead compound capable of modulating tau oligomerization in a cellular FRET assay and rescuing P301L tau-induced cytotoxicity. We rst con rmed a robust proteasomal activation by MK using a cellular proteasomal tau-GFP cleavage assay. We then show that MK treatment can signi cantly rescue tau-induced neurite pathology in differentiated SHSY5Y neurospheres. Due to this compelling result, we designed a series of seven MK analogs to determine if proteasomal activity is sensitive to structural permutations. Using a combination of proteasome, tau aggregation, neurite outgrowth, in ammation, and autophagy assays, we identi ed two essential substituents of MK that are required for compound activity: 1) Removal of the N-chlorobenzyl group from MK negated both proteasomal and autophagic activity and reduced neurite outgrowth; and 2) removal of the indole-5-isopropyl group signi cantly improved neurite outgrowth and autophagy activity but reduced its anti-in ammatory capacity. Overall, our results suggest that the combination of proteasomal/autophagic stimulation and anti-in ammatory properties of MK and its derivatives can decrease tau-tau interactions and help rebalance dysfunctional proteostasis. Further development of MK to optimize its proteasomal, autophagic, and anti-in ammatory targets may lead to a novel therapeutic that would be bene cial in ageing and neurodegenerative diseases.
There is a critical need for small molecules capable of rescuing pathophysiological phenotypes induced by alpha-synuclein (aSyn) misfolding and oligomerization. Building upon our previous aSyn cellular fluorescence lifetime (FLT)-Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) biosensors, we have developed an inducible cell model incorporating the red-shifted mCyRFP1/mMaroon1 (OFP/MFP) FRET pair. This new aSyn FRET biosensor improves the signal-to-noise ratio, reduces nonspecific background FRET, and results in a 4-fold increase (transient transfection) and 2-fold increase (stable, inducible cell lines) in FRET signal relative to our previous GFP/RFP aSyn biosensors. The inducible system institutes greater temporal control and scalability, allowing for fine-tuning of biosensor expression and minimizes cellular cytotoxicity due to overexpression of aSyn. Using these inducible aSyn-OFP/MFP biosensors, we screened the Selleck library of 2684 commercially available, FDA-approved compounds and identified proanthocyanidins and casanthranol as novel hits. Secondary assays validated the ability of these compounds to modulate aSyn FLT-FRET. Functional assays probing cellular cytotoxicity and aSyn fibrillization demonstrated their capability to inhibit seeded aSyn fibrillization. Proanthocyanidins completely rescued aSyn fibril-induced cellular toxicity with EC50 of 200 nM and casanthranol supported a 85.5% rescue with a projected EC50 of 34.2 μM. Furthermore, proanthocyanidins provide a valuable tool compound to validate our aSyn biosensor performance in future high-throughput screening campaigns of industrial-scale (million-compound) chemical libraries.
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