Artículos de revistas
Repositioning tolcapone as a potent inhibitor of transthyretin amyloidogenesis and associated cellular toxicity
Fecha
2016-02Registro en:
Sant’Anna, Ricardo; Gallego, Pablo; Robinson, Lei Z.; Pereira Henriques, Alda; Ferreira, Nelson; et al.; Repositioning tolcapone as a potent inhibitor of transthyretin amyloidogenesis and associated cellular toxicity; Nature Publishing Group; Nature Communications; 7; 10787; 2-2016; 1-13
2041-1723
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Sant’Anna, Ricardo
Gallego, Pablo
Robinson, Lei Z.
Pereira Henriques, Alda
Ferreira, Nelson
Pinheiro, Francisca
Esperante, Sebastian
Pallares, Irantzu
Huertas, Oscar
Almeida, Maria Rosario
Reixach, Natalia
Insa, Raul
Velazquez Campoy, Adrian
Reverter, David
Reig, Nuria
Ventura, Salvador
Resumen
Transthyretin (TTR) is a plasma homotetrameric protein implicated in fatal systemic amyloidoses. TTR tetramer dissociation precedes pathological TTR aggregation. Native state stabilizers are promising drugs to treat TTR amyloidoses. Here we repurpose tolcapone, an FDA-approved molecule for Parkinson's disease, as a potent TTR aggregation inhibitor. Tolcapone binds specifically to TTR in human plasma, stabilizes the native tetramer in vivo in mice and humans and inhibits TTR cytotoxicity. Crystal structures of tolcapone bound to wild-type TTR and to the V122I cardiomyopathy-associated variant show that it docks better into the TTR T4 pocket than tafamidis, so far the only drug on the market to treat TTR amyloidoses. These data indicate that tolcapone, already in clinical trials for familial amyloid polyneuropathy, is a strong candidate for therapeutic intervention in these diseases, including those affecting the central nervous system, for which no small-molecule therapy exists.