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Multitarget Therapeutic Leads for Alzheimer’s Disease: Quinolizidinyl Derivatives of Bi‐ and Tricyclic Systems as Dual Inhibitors of Cholinesterases and β‐Amyloid (Aβ) Aggregation
Author(s) -
Tonelli Michele,
Catto Marco,
Tasso Bruno,
Novelli Federica,
Canu Caterina,
Iusco Giovanna,
Pisani Leonardo,
Stradis Angelo De,
Denora Nunzio,
Sparatore Anna,
Boido Vito,
Carotti Angelo,
Sparatore Fabio
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
chemmedchem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.817
H-Index - 100
eISSN - 1860-7187
pISSN - 1860-7179
DOI - 10.1002/cmdc.201500104
Subject(s) - tricyclic , alzheimer's disease , amyloid (mycology) , disease , neuroscience , pharmacology , chemistry , medicine , biology , pathology
Abstract Multitarget therapeutic leads for Alzheimer’s disease were designed on the models of compounds capable of maintaining or restoring cell protein homeostasis and of inhibiting β‐amyloid (Aβ) oligomerization. Thirty‐seven thioxanthen‐9‐one, xanthen‐9‐one, naphto‐ and anthraquinone derivatives were tested for the direct inhibition of Aβ(1–40) aggregation and for the inhibition of electric eel acetylcholinesterase (eeAChE) and horse serum butyrylcholinesterase (hsBChE). These compounds are characterized by basic side chains, mainly quinolizidinylalkyl moieties, linked to various bi‐ and tri‐cyclic (hetero)aromatic systems. With very few exceptions, these compounds displayed inhibitory activity on both AChE and BChE and on the spontaneous aggregation of β‐amyloid. In most cases, IC 50 values were in the low micromolar and sub‐micromolar range, but some compounds even reached nanomolar potency. The time course of amyloid aggregation in the presence of the most active derivative (IC 50 =0.84 μ M ) revealed that these compounds might act as destabilizers of mature fibrils rather than mere inhibitors of fibrillization. Many compounds inhibited one or both cholinesterases and Aβ aggregation with similar potency, a fundamental requisite for the possible development of therapeutics exhibiting a multitarget mechanism of action. The described compounds thus represent interesting leads for the development of multitarget AD therapeutics.

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