AI Article Synopsis

  • Investigating how drug binds to AChE is important for treating Alzheimer's disease, particularly by targeting β-amyloid oligomers that play a key role in the disease.
  • The study looks at multifunctional compounds (HMC) and their effects on β-amyloid aggregation using several laboratory techniques to evaluate their potential in reducing toxicity.
  • Results suggest that HMC can disrupt toxic β-amyloid structures, bind effectively to AChE, and stabilize their interaction, offering promising strategies for further research into Alzheimer's treatments.

Article Abstract

Investigating the drug-AChE binding mechanism is vital in understanding its cogent use in medical practice against Alzheimer's disease (AD). The production and accumulation of oligomers of β-amyloid is a central event in the neuropathology of AD. Beside the inhibition of assembly process, modulation of the aggregation process of these proteins towards minimally toxic pathways may be a possible therapeutic strategy for AD. Hence, the present study aims to examine the effect of multifunctional fused tricyclic 7-hydroxy 4-methyl coumarin analogs (HMC) on the self-induced aggregation of β-amyloid using Thioflavin T (ThT) assay, scanning electron microscopic study, AlamarBlue and immune blotting assays and also the binding mechanism with AChE by fluorescence emission, conformational, molecular docking and molecular dynamic simulation studies under physiological pH 7.4. The ThT assay, FE-SEM study, cell line and western blots establish that the HMC molecules could irreversibly disrupt preformed Aβ fibrils, accelerate the aggregates into micro size co-assembled structures, and effectively eliminate the cytotoxicity of Aβ. Fluorescence emission studies indicating a strong binding affinity between HMC and AChE with the binding constants of 1.04 × 10, 3.57 × 10, 1.97 × 10, 3.07 × 10 and 2.95 × 10 M, respectively and binding sites number found to be 1. CD studies disclosed a partial unfolding in the secondary structure of AChE upon binding with HMC. Docking analysis inferred that the HMC were bound through hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions to the AChE active site. Molecular dynamics simulations emphasized the stability of AChE-HMC complexes throughout the 100 ns simulations, and the local conformational changes of the residues of AChE validate the stability of complexes. These results provide new and unique complementary approach for modulating the biological effects of the Aβ aggregates by coumarin analogs and new insights for further in vivo investigations as novel anti AD agents.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2021.10.204DOI Listing

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