A fast and specific method to screen for intracellular amyloid inhibitors using bacterial model systems

May 22, 2018

Title

A fast and specific method to screen for intracellular amyloid inhibitors using bacterial model systems

Author

Susanna Navarro, Anita Carija, Diego Muñoz-Torrero, Salvador Ventura

Year

2016

Journal

European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

Abstract

The aggregation of a large variety of amyloidogenic proteins is linked to the onset of devastating human disorders. Therefore, there is an urgent need for effective molecules able to modulate the aggregative properties of these polypeptides in their natural environment, in order to prevent, delay or halt the progression of such diseases. On the one hand, the complexity and cost of animal models make them inefficient at early stages of drug discovery, where large chemical libraries are usually screened. On the other hand, in vitro aggregation assays in aqueous solutions hardly reproduce (patho)physiological conditions. In this context, because the formation of insoluble aggregates in bacteria shares mechanistic and functional properties with amyloid self-assembly in higher organisms, they have emerged as a promising system to model aggregation in the cell. Here we show that bacteria provide a powerful and cost-effective system to screen for amyloid inhibitors using fluorescence spectroscopy and flow cytometry, thanks to the ability of the novel red fluorescent ProteoStat dye to detect specifically intracellular amyloid-like aggregates. We validated the approach using the Alzheimer's linked Aβ40 and Aβ42 peptides and tacrine- and huprine-based aggregation inhibitors. Overall, the present method bears the potential to replace classical in vitroanti-aggregation assays.

Instrument

FP-8200

Keywords

Fluorescence, Aggregation, Quantitation, Protein structure, Biochemistry, Medicinal