posted on 2020-07-06, 18:33authored byDavid J Townsend, Barbora Mala, Eleri Hughes, Rohanah Hussain, Giuliano Siligardi, Nigel J. Fullwood, David A. Middleton
Potential
drug treatments for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may
be found by identifying compounds that block the assembly of the microtubule-associated
protein tau into neurofibrillar tangles associated with neuron destabilization
and cell death. Here, a small library of structurally diverse compounds
was screened in vitro for the ability to inhibit
tau aggregation, using high-throughput synchrotron radiation circular
dichroism as a novel tool to monitor the structural changes in the
protein as it assembles into filaments. The catecholamine epinephrine
was found to be the most effective tau aggregation inhibitor of all
88 screened compounds. Subsequently, we tested chemically similar
phenolamine drugs from the β-adrenergic receptor agonist class,
using conventional circular dichroism spectroscopy, thioflavin T fluorescence,
and transmission electron microscopy. Two compounds, salbutamol and
dobutamine, used widely in the treatment of respiratory and cardiovascular
disease, impede the aggregation of tau in vitro.
Dobutamine reduces both the rate and yield of tau filament formation
over 24 h; however, it has little effect on the structural transition
of tau into β-sheet structures over 24 h. Salbutamol also reduces
the yield and rate of filament formation and additionally inhibits
tau’s structural change into β-sheet-rich aggregates.
Salbutamol has a good safety profile and a half-life that facilitates
permeation through the blood–brain barrier and could represent
an expediated approach to developing AD therapeutics. These results
provide the motivation for the in vivo evaluation
of pre-existing β-adrenergic receptor agonists as a potential
therapy for AD through the reduction of tau deposition.