Pharmacology and Therapeutics - Research Publications

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    Stabilization of Nontoxic Aβ-Oligomers: Insights into the Mechanism of Action of Hydroxyquinolines in Alzheimer's Disease
    Ryan, TM ; Roberts, BR ; McColl, G ; Hare, DJ ; Doble, PA ; Li, Q-X ; Lind, M ; Roberts, AM ; Mertens, HDT ; Kirby, N ; Pham, CLL ; Hinds, MG ; Adlard, PA ; Barnham, KJ ; Curtain, CC ; Masters, CL (SOC NEUROSCIENCE, 2015-02-18)
    The extracellular accumulation of amyloid β (Aβ) peptides is characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, formation of diffusible, oligomeric forms of Aβ, both on and off pathways to amyloid fibrils, is thought to include neurotoxic species responsible for synaptic loss and neurodegeneration, rather than polymeric amyloid aggregates. The 8-hydroxyquinolines (8-HQ) clioquinol (CQ) and PBT2 were developed for their ability to inhibit metal-mediated generation of reactive oxygen species from Aβ:Cu complexes and have both undergone preclinical and Phase II clinical development for the treatment of AD. Their respective modes of action are not fully understood and may include both inhibition of Aβ fibrillar polymerization and direct depolymerization of existing Aβ fibrils. In the present study, we find that CQ and PBT2 can interact directly with Aβ and affect its propensity to aggregate. Using a combination of biophysical techniques, we demonstrate that, in the presence of these 8-HQs and in the absence of metal ions, Aβ associates with two 8-HQ molecules and forms a dimer. Furthermore, 8-HQ bind Aβ with an affinity of 1-10 μm and suppress the formation of large (>30 kDa) oligomers. The stabilized low molecular weight species are nontoxic. Treatment with 8-HQs also reduces the levels of in vivo soluble oligomers in a Caenorhabditis elegans model of Aβ toxicity. We propose that 8-HQs possess an additional mechanism of action that neutralizes neurotoxic Aβ oligomer formation through stabilization of small (dimeric) nontoxic Aβ conformers.
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    Pharmacotherapeutic targets in Alzheimer's disease
    Biran, Y ; Masters, CL ; Barnham, KJ ; Bush, AI ; Adlard, PA (WILEY, 2009-01)
    Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder which is characterized by an increasing impairment in normal memory and cognitive processes that significantly diminishes a person's daily functioning. Despite decades of research and advances in our understanding of disease aetiology and pathogenesis, there are still no effective disease-modifying drugs available for the treatment of AD. However, numerous compounds are currently undergoing pre-clinical and clinical evaluations. These candidate pharma-cotherapeutics are aimed at various aspects of the disease, such as the microtubule-associated tau-protein, the amyloid-beta(Abeta) peptide and metal ion dyshomeostasis--all of which are involved in the development and progression of AD. We will review the way these pharmacological strategies target the biochemical and clinical features of the disease and the investigational drugs for each category.
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    Rhenium and technetium complexes that bind to amyloid-β plaques
    Hayne, DJ ; North, AJ ; Fodero-Tavoletti, M ; White, JM ; Hung, LW ; Rigopoulos, A ; McLean, CA ; Adlard, PA ; Ackermann, U ; Tochon-Danguy, H ; Villemagne, VL ; Barnham, KJ ; Donnelly, PS (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2015)
    Alzheimer's disease is associated with the presence of insoluble protein deposits in the brain called amyloid plaques. The major constituent of these deposits is aggregated amyloid-β peptide. Technetium-99m complexes that bind to amyloid-β plaques could provide important diagnostic information on amyloid-β plaque burden using Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT). Tridentate ligands with a stilbene functional group were used to form complexes with the fac-[M(I)(CO)3](+) (M = Re or (99m)Tc) core. The rhenium carbonyl complexes with tridentate co-ligands that included a stilbene functional group and a dimethylamino substituent bound to amyloid-β present in human frontal cortex brain tissue from subjects with Alzheimer's disease. This chemistry was extended to make the analogous [(99m)Tc(I)(CO)3](+) complexes and the complexes were sufficiently stable in human serum. Whilst the lipophilicity (log D7.4) of the technetium complexes appeared ideally suited for penetration of the blood-brain barrier, preliminary biodistribution studies in an AD mouse model (APP/PS1) revealed relatively low brain uptake (0.24% ID g(-1) at 2 min post injection).
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    β-amyloid in biological samples: not all Aβ detection methods are created equal
    Adlard, PA ; Li, Q-X ; McLean, C ; Masters, CL ; Bush, AI ; Fodero-Tavoletti, M ; Villemagne, V ; Barnham, KJ (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2014-08-13)