Liverpool: Researchers at the University of Liverpool and Victoria University of
Wellington have made a significant step forward in the search for a
treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. The research teams have discovered a novel way to create sugar-based
molecules for controlling the process that leads to proteins, called
amyloid plaques, building up in the brain. These proteins disrupt the
normal function of cells leading to the progressive memory loss that is
characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease.
Current treatments for dementia can help with symptoms, but there are
no drugs available that can slow or stop the underlying disease.
The team has previously synthesised a type of complex sugar for the
same purpose, which involved a challenging 55 step process. The new
approach reduces the number of reaction steps by half.
Liverpool biochemists, Professor Jeremy Turnbull and Dr Scott
Guimond, worked with chemists, Dr Zubkova and Professor Peter Tyler,
from the Ferrier Institute in Wellington to construct new molecules and
screen their abilities to inhibit the activity of a brain enzyme called
beta-secretase. This enzyme catalyses the first step in the generation
of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer’s.
Professor Turnbull, from the University’s Institute of Integrative
Biology, said: “This provides a highly desirable class of compounds that
could be used in the development of new treatments, with real potential
for targeting one of the underlying causes of Alzheimer’s disease.
“These novel chemicals also unlock potential for a number of
additional drug discovery applications in the future including cancer
and diabetes.”
The team prepared a large collection of molecules, including 11 final
products as pure single-entity chemicals. The cluster compounds are
much less complex and have the ability to target specific proteins.
“We wanted to simplify the synthesis without losing potency, which is
quite challenging,” says chemistry project leader Dr Olga Zubkova. “The
new products will be easier and cheaper to make, and allow us to
prepare larger amounts for testing.”
The team designed a more simplified core for the molecules by
replacing fragments with smaller and cheaper carbon versions. This
resulted in structures that retained significant amounts of
bioactivity.
The research, published in the prestigious international journal Angewandte Chemie,
was supported by funding in the UK from Alzheimer’s Research UK, the
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), and the
Medical Research Council, and in New Zealand from the Ministry of
Business, Innovation and Employment.