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Pharmacological Characterization of Memoquin, a Multi-Target Compound for the Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease
Author(s) -
Valeria Capurro,
Perrine Busquet,
João Pedro Lopes,
Rosalia Bertorelli,
Glauco Tarozzo,
María Laura Bolognesi,
Daniele Piomelli,
Angelo Reggiani,
Andrea Cavalli
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0056870
Subject(s) - donepezil , morris water navigation task , amnesia , neuroscience , neurotoxicity , dementia , pharmacology , amyloid beta , medicine , episodic memory , alzheimer's disease , amyloid precursor protein , in vivo , barnes maze , oxidative stress , neurodegeneration , presenilin , cognition , disease , psychology , biology , psychiatry , toxicity , spatial learning , microbiology and biotechnology
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive loss of cognitive function, dementia and altered behavior. Over 30 million people worldwide suffer from AD and available therapies are still palliative rather than curative. Recently, Memoquin (MQ), a quinone-bearing polyamine compound, has emerged as a promising anti-AD lead candidate, mainly thanks to its multi-target profile. MQ acts as an acetylcholinesterase and β-secretase-1 inhibitor, and also possesses anti-amyloid and anti-oxidant properties. Despite this potential interest, in vivo behavioral studies with MQ have been limited. Here, we report on in vivo studies with MQ (acute and sub-chronic treatments; 7–15 mg/kg per os ) carried out using two different mouse models: i) scopolamine- and ii) beta-amyloid peptide- (Aβ-) induced amnesia. Several aspects related to memory were examined using the T-maze, the Morris water maze, the novel object recognition, and the passive avoidance tasks. At the dose of 15 mg/kg, MQ was able to rescue all tested aspects of cognitive impairment including spatial, episodic, aversive, short and long-term memory in both scopolamine- and Aβ-induced amnesia models. Furthermore, when tested in primary cortical neurons, MQ was able to fully prevent the Aβ-induced neurotoxicity mediated by oxidative stress. The results support the effectiveness of MQ as a cognitive enhancer, and highlight the value of a multi-target strategy to address the complex nature of cognitive dysfunction in AD.

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