Artículo de revista
Rosmarinic acid prevents fibrillization and diminishes vibrational modes associated to beta sheet in tau protein linked to Alzheimer’s disease
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal
Chemistry, 2017, Vol. 32, No. 1, 945–953
10.1080/14756366.2017.1347783
Autor
Cornejo, Alberto
Aguilar Sandoval, Felipe
Caballero, Leonardo
Machuca, Luis
Muñoz, Patricio
Caballero, Julio
Perry, George
Ardiles, Alejandro
Areche Medina, Carlos
Melo, Francisco
Institución
Resumen
Alzheimer’s disease is a common tauopathy where fibril formation and aggregates are the hallmark of the
disease. Efforts targeting amyloid-b plaques have succeeded to remove plaques but failed in clinical trials
to improve cognition; thus, the current therapeutic strategy is at preventing tau aggregation. Here, we
demonstrated that four phenolic diterpenoids and rosmarinic acid inhibit fibrillization. Since, rosmarinic
acid was the most active compound, we observe morphological changes in atomic force microscopy
images after treatment. Hence, rosmarinic acid leads to a decrease in amide regions I and III, indicating
that rosmarinic acid prevents b-sheet assembly. Molecular docking study inside the steric zipper model of
the hexapeptide 306VQIVYK311 involved in fibrillization and b sheet formation, suggests that rosmarinic
acid binds to the steric zipper with similar chemical interactions with respect to those observed for orange
G, a known pharmacofore for amyloid.