Structure-based discovery of small molecules that disaggregate Alzheimer’s disease tissue derived tau fibrils in vitro

Paul M. Seidler(University of Southern California), Kevin A. Murray(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), David R. Boyer(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), P. Ge(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), M.R. Sawaya(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Carolyn J. Hu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xinyi Cheng(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Romany Abskharon(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Hope Pan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Michael DeTure(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Christopher Kazu Williams(University of California, Los Angeles), Dennis W. Dickson(Mayo Clinic in Florida), Harry V. Vinters(University of California, Los Angeles), David Eisenberg(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Nature Communications
September 16, 2022
Cited by 184Open Access
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the consequence of neuronal death and brain atrophy associated with the aggregation of protein tau into fibrils. Thus disaggregation of tau fibrils could be a therapeutic approach to AD. The small molecule EGCG, abundant in green tea, has long been known to disaggregate tau and other amyloid fibrils, but EGCG has poor drug-like properties, failing to fully penetrate the brain. Here we have cryogenically trapped an intermediate of brain-extracted tau fibrils on the kinetic pathway to EGCG-induced disaggregation and have determined its cryoEM structure. The structure reveals that EGCG molecules stack in polar clefts between the paired helical protofilaments that pathologically define AD. Treating the EGCG binding position as a pharmacophore, we computationally screened thousands of drug-like compounds for compatibility for the pharmacophore, discovering several that experimentally disaggregate brain-derived tau fibrils in vitro. This work suggests the potential of structure-based, small-molecule drug discovery for amyloid diseases.


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