Quantitative Attribution of the Protective Effects of Aminosterols against Protein Aggregates to Their Chemical Structures and Ability to Modulate Biological Membranes

Natural aminosterols are promising drug candidates against neurodegenerative diseases, like Alzheimer and Parkinson, and one relevant protective mechanism occurs via their binding to biological membranes and displacement or binding inhibition of amyloidogenic proteins and their cytotoxic oligomers....

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Published inJournal of medicinal chemistry Vol. 66; no. 14; pp. 9519 - 9536
Main Authors Errico, Silvia, Lucchesi, Giacomo, Odino, Davide, Osman, Enass Youssef, Cascella, Roberta, Neri, Lorenzo, Capitini, Claudia, Calamai, Martino, Bemporad, Francesco, Cecchi, Cristina, Kinney, William A., Barbut, Denise, Relini, Annalisa, Canale, Claudio, Caminati, Gabriella, Limbocker, Ryan, Vendruscolo, Michele, Zasloff, Michael, Chiti, Fabrizio
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 27.07.2023
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Summary:Natural aminosterols are promising drug candidates against neurodegenerative diseases, like Alzheimer and Parkinson, and one relevant protective mechanism occurs via their binding to biological membranes and displacement or binding inhibition of amyloidogenic proteins and their cytotoxic oligomers. We compared three chemically different aminosterols, finding that they exhibited different (i) binding affinities, (ii) charge neutralizations, (iii) mechanical reinforcements, and (iv) key lipid redistributions within membranes of reconstituted liposomes. They also had different potencies (EC50) in protecting cultured cell membranes against amyloid-β oligomers. A global fitting analysis led to an analytical equation describing quantitatively the protective effects of aminosterols as a function of their concentration and relevant membrane effects. The analysis correlates aminosterol-mediated protection with well-defined chemical moieties, including the polyamine group inducing a partial membrane-neutralizing effect (79 ± 7%) and the cholestane-like tail causing lipid redistribution and bilayer mechanical resistance (21 ± 7%), linking quantitatively their chemistry to their protective effects on biological membranes.
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ISSN:0022-2623
1520-4804
DOI:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00182