4.4 Article

Aminopyrimidine Class Aggregation Inhibitor Effectively Blocks Aβ-Fibrinogen Interaction and Aβ-Induced Contact System Activation

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 57, Issue 8, Pages 1399-1409

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.7b01214

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Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation
  2. Robertson Therapeutic Development Fund for H.A., NIH [NS50537]
  3. Tri-Institutional Therapeutics Discovery Institute
  4. Rudin Family Foundation
  5. John A. Herrmann

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Accumulating evidence suggests that fibrinogen, a key protein in the coagulation cascade, plays an important role in circulatory dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Previous work has shown that the interaction between fibrinogen and beta-amyloid (A beta), a hallmark pathological protein in AD, induces plasmin-resistant abnormal blood clots, delays fibrinolysis, increases inflammation, and aggravates cognitive function in mouse models of AD. Since A beta oligomers have a much stronger affinity for fibrinogen than A beta monomers, we tested whether amyloid aggregation inhibitors could block the A beta-fibrinogen interaction and found that some A beta aggregation inhibitors showed moderate inhibitory efficacy against this interaction. We then modified a hit compound so that it not only showed a strong inhibitory efficacy toward the A beta-fibrinogen interaction but also retained its potency toward the A beta 42 aggregation inhibition process. Furthermore, our best hit compound, TDI-2760, modulated A beta 42-induced contact system activation, a pathological condition observed in some AD patients, in addition to inhibiting the A beta-fibrinogen interaction and A beta-aggregation. Thus, TDI-2760 has the potential to lessen vascular abnormalities as well as A beta aggregation-driven pathology in AD.

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