Scientific Reports (Sep 2023)

Stress-mediated aggregation of disease-associated proteins in amyloid bodies

  • Sahil Chandhok,
  • Lionel Pereira,
  • Evgenia A. Momchilova,
  • Dane Marijan,
  • Richard Zapf,
  • Emma Lacroix,
  • Avneet Kaur,
  • Shayan Keymanesh,
  • Charles Krieger,
  • Timothy E. Audas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-41712-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The formation of protein aggregates is a hallmark of many neurodegenerative diseases and systemic amyloidoses. These disorders are associated with the fibrillation of a variety of proteins/peptides, which ultimately leads to cell toxicity and tissue damage. Understanding how amyloid aggregation occurs and developing compounds that impair this process is a major challenge in the health science community. Here, we demonstrate that pathogenic proteins associated with Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, AL/AA amyloidosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis can aggregate within stress-inducible physiological amyloid-based structures, termed amyloid bodies (A-bodies). Using a limited collection of small molecule inhibitors, we found that diclofenac could repress amyloid aggregation of the β-amyloid (1–42) in a cellular setting, despite having no effect in the classic Thioflavin T (ThT) in vitro fibrillation assay. Mapping the mechanism of the diclofenac-mediated repression indicated that dysregulation of cyclooxygenases and the prostaglandin synthesis pathway was potentially responsible for this effect. Together, this work suggests that the A-body machinery may be linked to a subset of pathological amyloidosis, and highlights the utility of this model system in the identification of new small molecules that could treat these debilitating diseases.