Microglia-Based Phenotypic Screening Identifies a Novel Inhibitor of Neuroinflammation Effective in Alzheimer’s Disease Models

Currently, anti-AD drug discovery using target-based approaches is extremely challenging due to unclear etiology of AD and absence of validated therapeutic protein targets. Neuronal death, regardless of causes, plays a key role in AD progression, and it is directly linked to neuroinflammation. Meanw...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS chemical neuroscience 2016-11, Vol.7 (11), p.1499-1507
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Wei, Zhong, Guifa, Fu, Sihai, Xie, Hui, Chi, Tianyan, Li, Luyi, Rao, Xiurong, Zeng, Shaogao, Xu, Dengfeng, Wang, Hao, Sheng, Guoqing, Ji, Xing, Liu, Xiaorong, Ji, Xuefei, Wu, Donghai, Zou, Libo, Tortorella, Micky, Zhang, Kejian, Hu, Wenhui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Currently, anti-AD drug discovery using target-based approaches is extremely challenging due to unclear etiology of AD and absence of validated therapeutic protein targets. Neuronal death, regardless of causes, plays a key role in AD progression, and it is directly linked to neuroinflammation. Meanwhile, phenotypic screening is making a resurgence in drug discovery process as an alternative to target-focused approaches. Herein, we employed microglia-based phenotypic screenings to search for small molecules that modulate the release of detrimental proinflammatory cytokines. The identified novel pharmacological inhibitor of neuroinflammation (named GIBH-130) was validated to alter phenotypes of neuroinflammation in AD brains. Notably, this molecule exhibited comparable in vivo efficacy of cognitive impairment relief to donepezil and memantine respectively in both β amyloid-induced and APP/PS1 double transgenic Alzheimer’s murine models at a substantially lower dose (0.25 mg/kg). Therefore, GIBH-130 constitutes a unique chemical probe for pathogenesis research and drug development of AD, and it also suggests microglia-based phenotypic screenings that target neuroinflammation as an effective and feasible strategy to identify novel anti-AD agents.
ISSN:1948-7193
1948-7193
DOI:10.1021/acschemneuro.6b00125