Ebselen analogues delay disease onset and its course in fALS by on-target SOD-1 engagement

oleh: Seiji Watanabe, Kangsa Amporndanai, Raheela Awais, Caroline Latham, Muhammad Awais, Paul M. O’Neill, Koji Yamanaka, S. Samar Hasnain

Format: Article
Diterbitkan: Nature Portfolio 2024-05-01

Deskripsi

Abstract Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) selectively affects motor neurons. SOD1 is the first causative gene to be identified for ALS and accounts for at least 20% of the familial (fALS) and up to 4% of sporadic (sALS) cases globally with some geographical variability. The destabilisation of the SOD1 dimer is a key driving force in fALS and sALS. Protein aggregation resulting from the destabilised SOD1 is arrested by the clinical drug ebselen and its analogues (MR6-8-2 and MR6-26-2) by redeeming the stability of the SOD1 dimer. The in vitro target engagement of these compounds is demonstrated using the bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay with protein–ligand binding directly visualised by co-crystallography in G93A SOD1. MR6-26-2 offers neuroprotection slowing disease onset of SOD1G93A mice by approximately 15 days. It also protected neuromuscular junction from muscle denervation in SOD1G93A mice clearly indicating functional improvement.