4.6 Article

Anti-brain Aging Effects of Small Molecule Inhibitor DDQ

Journal

MOLECULAR NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 7, Pages 3588-3600

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12035-021-02360-7

Keywords

Alzheimer’ s disease; DDQ; C57BL6; J aged mice; Longevity genes SIRTUINS; Dendritic spines; Mitochondria; HT22 neurons; DNA damage

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [AG042178, AG047812, NS105473, AG060767, AG069333, AG066347, R41 AG060836]

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The study aimed to investigate the protective effects of the newly discovered molecule DDQ against aging, with 20 mg/kg body weight showing the strongest protective effects in mice. DDQ was found to upregulate longevity genes SIRTUINS and significantly increase dendritic spines and mitochondrial quality.
The purpose of our study is to determine the protective effects of the newly discovered molecule DDQ (diethyl (3,4-dihydroxyphenethylamino)(quinolin-4-yl) methylphosphonate) against aging in an in vitro, mouse primary hippocampal neurons, HT22 cells, and in vivo, 24-month-old C57BL6/J mice. Using biochemical and molecular methods, we studied the half-life period in the blood and brain, optimized the dose, determined dose-response (using 1, 5, 10, 20, and 50 mg/kg body weight), and measured the levels of blood, skeletal muscle, and brain. Using Morris water maze (cognitive behavior), q-RT-PCR (mRNA and protein levels of longevity genes SIRTUINS), transmission electron microscopy (mitochondrial number and length), and Golgi-Cox staining (dendritic spine number and length) were assessed in 24-month-old C57BL6/J mice. Out of 5 different doses of DDQ, the 20 mg/kg body weight dose showed the strongest protective effects against aging in C57BL6/J mice. The half-life time of DDQ is 20 h in the serum and 12 h in the brain. Our extensive pharmacodynamics analysis revealed high peak levels of DDQ in the skeletal muscle, followed by serum and brain. Using mouse primary hippocampal (HT22) neurons and 24-month-old C57BL6/J mice, we tested the protective effects of DDQ. Interestingly, longevity genes SIRTUINS were upregulated in DDQ-treated HT22 cells, and DDQ-treated aged wild-type mice relative to DDQ-untreated cells and untreated aged control mice. Dendritic spines and the quality of mitochondria were significantly increased in DDQ-treated aged mice. Current study findings, together with our previous study observations, strongly suggest that DDQ has anti-aging effects and warrants further investigations of anti-inflammatory, anti-DNA damage, and telomerase activity studies.

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