Title: Rapid detection of drugs for protein misfolding diseases.
1Rapid detection of drugs for protein misfolding
diseases.
- Alexey Krasnoslobodtsev,
- Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences,
- University of Nebraska Medical Center
- COBRE 16 January, 2009
2Protein misfolding and Diseases.
- Protein mislfoding and aggregation is linked to
many pathological diseases Alzheimer's,
Parkinsons, Huntingtons and prion diseases. - These diseases have common molecular mechanisms
including protein aggregation and inclusion body
formation.
3Protein misfolding diseases.
- The current status of drug development for
protein misfolding diseases - Most studied Alzheimer's and Parkinsons
- Alzheimers Because there is no cure, managing
the disease usually involves medications to
control symptoms, in combination with various
non-drug strategies designed to ease the
suffering of the person afflicted as well as his
or her family and caregiver. (http//www.alzinfo.o
rg/) - Parkinsons At this time no treatment has been
shown to slow or stop the progression of this
disease. Instead, therapy is directed at treating
the symptoms that are most bothersome to an
individual with Parkinson's disease.
(http//www.parkinson.org/) - Universally fatal diseases.
4Possible therapeutic interventions for protein
misfolding diseases
An emerging therapeutic strategy for protein
misfolding diseases Small molecules that bind
to specific regions of the misfolded protein and
stabilize it. Chemical (pharmacological)
Chaperones
- Skovronovsky D.M., et al., 2006, Annu. Rev.
Pathol. Dis., 1151-70
5Projects objective.
- There is a critical need to identify effective
therapeutic agents to treat and/or prevent these
devastating diseases. - There is a critical need for exploration of novel
more rapid and efficient methods to study the
molecular mechanisms underlying protein
misfolding.
- The objective of the project is to evaluate
single molecule force spectroscopy as a novel
method that would identify pathological
conformations of a protein molecule (misfolded
states), determine factors stabilizing
interactions between misfolded proteins, improve
the decision making process for potential drug
candidates.
6Specific Aims
- Specific aim 1 Confirm the efficacy of single
molecule force spectroscopy for identifying
pathological interactions. - - Our working hypothesis is that the strength of
interactions between individual proteins measured
with single molecule force spectroscopy is linked
to pathology. -
- 2) Specific aim 2 Evaluate the possibility of
using Force Spectroscopy for high-throughput
screening of potential drugs that prevent
aggregation. - - Our working hypothesis is that the use of
single molecule force spectroscopy will
significantly increase the speed of decision
making for drug candidates in protein misfolding
diseases. - 3) Specific aim 3 Identify stabilizing factors
that drive self-assembly of proteins leading to
smart drug design. - - We will test the hypothesis that the subset of
interactions that contribute the most to the
stability of aggregated species comes from the
main chain hydrogen bonding between proteins
which explains structural similarities of
aggregates formed by proteins diverse in
sequence.
7Force Spectroscopy a nanotool for early
detection of protein misfolded states.
- The misfolded protein conformation that is
aggregation prone is different from other protein
conformations by their increased propensity to
interact with each another leading to
aggregation.
- Force spectroscopy can detect such propensity by
measuring strength of interactions between
individual molecules.
The strength of interactions between proteins in
misfolded state is elevated.
- Advantages
- Force spectroscopy operates at single molecule
level and it is capable of detecting and
analyzing aggregation prone conformations very
early in the disease development at the step of
dimer formation.
8Simple model system Short peptide from Sup35
yeast prion protein.
Sup35 is a translation termination factor.
A seven amino acid sequence within the
N-terminal domain is responsible for the
aggregation of the whole Sup35 protein. This
short peptide aggregates with the formation of
fibrils.
We have observed that ionic strength of solution
has a strong effect on aggregation kinetics of
this peptide.
Ionic strength 11 mM 150 mM
Lag time 10.8 hours 7.1 hours
9Pathological mutations of a-synuclein.
Pathological interactions.
- a-synuclein is expressed in the brain, normally
unstructured and water soluble. - It aggregates
to form insoluble fibrils (Lewy bodies) found in
Parkinsons disease. - Accumulation of Lewy
bodies causes cell death which leads to selective
loss of neurons ? progressive motoric
dysfunction.
F 58 pN
Wild Type
F 75 pN
A single point mutation in a-synuclein - A53T has
been identified in familial early-onset
Parkinson's disease . Previous reports have
shown that mutant a-synuclein aggregates more
rapidly than wild-type protein.
10Specific Aims
- Specific aim 1 Determine the benefit of single
molecule force spectroscopy for
tracking(identifying) pathological interactions. - - Our working hypothesis is that the strength of
interactions between individual proteins measured
with single molecule force spectroscopy is linked
to pathology. -
- 2) Specific aim 2 Evaluate the possibility of
using Force Spectroscopy for high-throughput
screening of potential drugs that prevent
aggregation. - - Our working hypothesis is that the use of
single molecule force spectroscopy will
significantly increase the speed of decision
making for drug candidates in protein misfolding
diseases. - 3) Specific aim 3 Identify stabilizing factors
that drive self-assembly of proteins leading to
smart drug design. - - We will test the hypothesis that the subset of
interactions that contribute the most to the
stability of aggregated species comes from the
main chain hydrogen bonding between proteins
which explains structural similarities of
aggregates formed by proteins diverse in
sequence.
11AFM force spectroscopy -High throughput
screening machine for detecting efficient
therapeutic agents
Force Spectroscopy is a novel nanotool with
enormous potentials for the high-throughput
screening of Alzheimer's and Parkinsons drug
candidates. The flow cell mode allows testing
the candidate drugs at various conditions
approaching to the physiological ones with
automated exchange of buffers containing drugs of
interest.
Control
Drug 1
Drug 2
Drug 3
Force of intermolecular interactions
-
- Drug 2 is the best candidate for the
development of effective therapeutic agents
This method would allow for rapid screening of
drug candidates created through combinatorial
chemistry.
12Specific Aims
- Specific aim 1 Determine the benefit of single
molecule force spectroscopy for
tracking(identifying) pathological interactions. - - Our working hypothesis is that the strength of
interactions between individual proteins measured
with single molecule force spectroscopy is linked
to pathology. -
- 2) Specific aim 2 Evaluate the possibility of
using Force Spectroscopy for high-throughput
screening of potential drugs that prevent
aggregation. - - Our working hypothesis is that the use of
single molecule force spectroscopy will
significantly increase the speed of decision
making for drug candidates in protein misfolding
diseases. - 3) Specific aim 3 Identify stabilizing factors
that drive self-assembly of proteins leading to
smart drug design. - - We will test the hypothesis that the subset of
interactions that contribute the most to the
stability of aggregated species comes from the
main chain hydrogen bonding between proteins
which explains structural similarities of
aggregates formed by proteins diverse in
sequence.
13- We will use a combination of main-chain
mutations which would remove backbone hydrogen
bonding in the core sequences of aggregation and
Dynamic Force Spectroscopy.
14Beyond Force SpectroscopyDynamic Force
Spectroscopy (DFS)
Dynamic force spectroscopy (measuring forces at
various loading rates) reveals structural
energetic information in complex system.
Using DFS one can obtain the off-rate constant of
spontaneous dissociation of the complex. This
further characterizes the early stages of the
misfolded protein interactions leading to the
formation of protein dimers.
The lifetime of the dimers is one of the
important properties quantitatively
characterizing the stability of the very first
intermediate state of protein aggregates. The
lifetimes for the a-synuclein dimer pH 2.7 gt 4
sec pH 3.7 gt 1.3 sec pH 5.1 gt 0.3 sec
Yu, J., et al., J. Mol.Biol., 2008, Vol. 384,
992-1001.
15Summary
- The project capitalizes on the use of a novel
concept that Force Spectroscopy provides an
advanced detection of protein conformational
changes (misfolding) with enhanced interprotein
interactions critically involved in aggregation
process. - This novel nanoprobing approach will help in
overcoming the limitations of traditional
ensemble based methods to detect and analyze
misfolded states of proteins. Application of this
approach has a potential for rapid screening,
analysis and evaluation of potential inhibitors
(drugs) of protein aggregation. It is expected to
speed the decision making and ultimately shorten
the overall time for drug development process. - The work proposed in this project is expected to
elucidate the mechanism of initial stages of
aggregation which will have a positive impact on
the development of rational effective
therapeutics.