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M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) comprises multifactorial ailments for which current therapeutic strategies remain insufficient to broadly address the underlying pathophysiology. Epigenetic gene regulation relies upon multifactorial processes that regulate multiple gene and protein pathways, including those...

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Autores principales: Volmar, Claude-Henry, Salah-Uddin, Hasib, Janczura, Karolina J., Halley, Paul, Lambert, Guerline, Wodrich, Andrew, Manoah, Sivan, Patel, Nidhi H., Sartor, Gregory C., Mehta, Neil, Miles, Nancy T. H., Desse, Sachi, Dorcius, David, Cameron, Michael D., Brothers, Shaun P., Wahlestedt, Claes
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5664514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29073110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1707544114
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author Volmar, Claude-Henry
Salah-Uddin, Hasib
Janczura, Karolina J.
Halley, Paul
Lambert, Guerline
Wodrich, Andrew
Manoah, Sivan
Patel, Nidhi H.
Sartor, Gregory C.
Mehta, Neil
Miles, Nancy T. H.
Desse, Sachi
Dorcius, David
Cameron, Michael D.
Brothers, Shaun P.
Wahlestedt, Claes
author_facet Volmar, Claude-Henry
Salah-Uddin, Hasib
Janczura, Karolina J.
Halley, Paul
Lambert, Guerline
Wodrich, Andrew
Manoah, Sivan
Patel, Nidhi H.
Sartor, Gregory C.
Mehta, Neil
Miles, Nancy T. H.
Desse, Sachi
Dorcius, David
Cameron, Michael D.
Brothers, Shaun P.
Wahlestedt, Claes
author_sort Volmar, Claude-Henry
collection PubMed
description Alzheimer’s disease (AD) comprises multifactorial ailments for which current therapeutic strategies remain insufficient to broadly address the underlying pathophysiology. Epigenetic gene regulation relies upon multifactorial processes that regulate multiple gene and protein pathways, including those involved in AD. We therefore took an epigenetic approach where a single drug would simultaneously affect the expression of a number of defined AD-related targets. We show that the small-molecule histone deacetylase inhibitor M344 reduces beta-amyloid (Aβ), reduces tau Ser(396) phosphorylation, and decreases both β-secretase (BACE) and APOEε4 gene expression. M344 increases the expression of AD-relevant genes: BDNF, α-secretase (ADAM10), MINT2, FE65, REST, SIRT1, BIN1, and ABCA7, among others. M344 increases sAPPα and CTFα APP metabolite production, both cleavage products of ADAM10, concordant with increased ADAM10 gene expression. M344 also increases levels of immature APP, supporting an effect on APP trafficking, concurrent with the observed increase in MINT2 and FE65, both shown to increase immature APP in the early secretory pathway. Chronic i.p. treatment of the triple transgenic (APP(sw)/PS1(M146V)/Tau(P301L)) mice with M344, at doses as low as 3 mg/kg, significantly prevented cognitive decline evaluated by Y-maze spontaneous alternation, novel object recognition, and Barnes maze spatial memory tests. M344 displays short brain exposure, indicating that brief pulses of daily drug treatment may be sufficient for long-term efficacy. Together, these data show that M344 normalizes several disparate pathogenic pathways related to AD. M344 therefore serves as an example of how a multitargeting compound could be used to address the polygenic nature of multifactorial diseases.
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spelling pubmed-56645142017-11-03 M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory Volmar, Claude-Henry Salah-Uddin, Hasib Janczura, Karolina J. Halley, Paul Lambert, Guerline Wodrich, Andrew Manoah, Sivan Patel, Nidhi H. Sartor, Gregory C. Mehta, Neil Miles, Nancy T. H. Desse, Sachi Dorcius, David Cameron, Michael D. Brothers, Shaun P. Wahlestedt, Claes Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A PNAS Plus Alzheimer’s disease (AD) comprises multifactorial ailments for which current therapeutic strategies remain insufficient to broadly address the underlying pathophysiology. Epigenetic gene regulation relies upon multifactorial processes that regulate multiple gene and protein pathways, including those involved in AD. We therefore took an epigenetic approach where a single drug would simultaneously affect the expression of a number of defined AD-related targets. We show that the small-molecule histone deacetylase inhibitor M344 reduces beta-amyloid (Aβ), reduces tau Ser(396) phosphorylation, and decreases both β-secretase (BACE) and APOEε4 gene expression. M344 increases the expression of AD-relevant genes: BDNF, α-secretase (ADAM10), MINT2, FE65, REST, SIRT1, BIN1, and ABCA7, among others. M344 increases sAPPα and CTFα APP metabolite production, both cleavage products of ADAM10, concordant with increased ADAM10 gene expression. M344 also increases levels of immature APP, supporting an effect on APP trafficking, concurrent with the observed increase in MINT2 and FE65, both shown to increase immature APP in the early secretory pathway. Chronic i.p. treatment of the triple transgenic (APP(sw)/PS1(M146V)/Tau(P301L)) mice with M344, at doses as low as 3 mg/kg, significantly prevented cognitive decline evaluated by Y-maze spontaneous alternation, novel object recognition, and Barnes maze spatial memory tests. M344 displays short brain exposure, indicating that brief pulses of daily drug treatment may be sufficient for long-term efficacy. Together, these data show that M344 normalizes several disparate pathogenic pathways related to AD. M344 therefore serves as an example of how a multitargeting compound could be used to address the polygenic nature of multifactorial diseases. National Academy of Sciences 2017-10-24 2017-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5664514/ /pubmed/29073110 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1707544114 Text en Freely available online through the PNAS open access option.
spellingShingle PNAS Plus
Volmar, Claude-Henry
Salah-Uddin, Hasib
Janczura, Karolina J.
Halley, Paul
Lambert, Guerline
Wodrich, Andrew
Manoah, Sivan
Patel, Nidhi H.
Sartor, Gregory C.
Mehta, Neil
Miles, Nancy T. H.
Desse, Sachi
Dorcius, David
Cameron, Michael D.
Brothers, Shaun P.
Wahlestedt, Claes
M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title_full M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title_fullStr M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title_full_unstemmed M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title_short M344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing Alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
title_sort m344 promotes nonamyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing while normalizing alzheimer’s disease genes and improving memory
topic PNAS Plus
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5664514/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29073110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1707544114
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