Piperazine derivatives inhibit PrP/PrP(res) propagation in vitro and in vivo

  • Fabienne Leidel
  • Martin Eiden
  • Markus Geissen
  • Thomas Hirschberger
  • Paul Tavan
  • Armin Giese
  • Hans A Kretzschmar
  • Hermann Schätzl
  • Martin H Groschup

Related Research units

Abstract

Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders, which are not curable and no effective treatment exists so far. The major neuropathological change in diseased brains is the conversion of the normal cellular form of the prion protein PrPc(C) into a disease-associated isoform PrP(Sc). PrP(Sc) accumulates into multimeres and fibrillar aggregates, which leads to the formation of amyloid plaques. Increasing evidence indicates a fundamental role of PrP(Sc) species and its aggregation in the pathogenesis of prion diseases, which initiates the pathological cascade and leads to neurodegeneration accompanied by spongiform changes. In search of compounds that have the potential to interfere with PrP(Sc) formation and propagation, we used a cell based assay for the screening of potential aggregation inhibitors. The assay deals with a permanently prion infected cell line that was adapted for a high-throughput screening of a compound library composed of 10,000 compounds (DIVERset 2, ChemBridge). We could detect six different classes of highly potent inhibitors of PrP(Sc) propagation in vitro and identified piperazine derivatives as a new inhibitory lead structure, which increased incubation time of scrapie infected mice.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0006-291X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28.02.2014

Comment Deanary

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PubMed 24502948