α-Synuclein aggregation inhibitory activity of the bromotyrosine derivatives aerothionin and aerophobin-2 from the subtropical marine sponge Aplysinella sp

Dale W. Prebble, Safak Er, Mingming Xu, Irena Hlushchuk, Andrii Domanskyi, Mikko Airavaara, Merrick G. Ekins, George D. Mellick, Anthony R. Carroll

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

The neuronal protein α-synuclein (α-syn) is one of the main constituents of intracellular amyloid aggregations found in the post-mortem brains of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients. Recently, we screened the MEOH extracts obtained from 300 sub-tropical marine invertebrates for α-syn binding activity using affinity MS and this resulted in the extract of the Verongida marine sponge Aplysinella sp. 1194, (QM G339263) displaying molecules that bind to the protein. The subsequent bioassay-guided separation of the Aplysinella sp. extract led to the isolation of the known bromotyrosine derivatives (+)-aerothionin (1) and (+)-aerophobin-2 (2). Both compounds bind to α-syn as detected by a MS affinity assay and inhibit α-syn aggregation in an assay that uses the fluorescence probe, thioflavin T, to detect aggregation. (+)-Aerothionin (1) was toxic to primary dopaminergic neurons at its expected α-syn aggregation inhibitory concentration and so could not be tested for pSyn aggregates in this functional assay. (+)-Aerophobin-2 (2) was not toxic and shown to weakly inhibit pSyn aggregation in primary dopaminergic neurons at 10 µM.
Original languageEnglish
Article number100472
JournalResults in chemistry
Volume4
Number of pages6
ISSN2211-7156
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 116 Chemical sciences
  • Natural-product
  • Protein aggregation
  • In-vivo
  • Inclusions
  • Mechanism
  • Disease

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