TY - JOUR A1 - Hofmann, Julian A1 - Ginex, Tiziana A1 - Espargaró, Alba A1 - Scheiner, Matthias A1 - Gunesch, Sandra A1 - Aragó, Marc A1 - Stigloher, Christian A1 - Sabaté, Raimon A1 - Luque, F. Javier A1 - Decker, Michael T1 - Azobioisosteres of Curcumin with Pronounced Activity against Amyloid Aggregation, Intracellular Oxidative Stress, and Neuroinflammation JF - Chemistry – A European Journal N2 - Many (poly‐)phenolic natural products, for example, curcumin and taxifolin, have been studied for their activity against specific hallmarks of neurodegeneration, such as amyloid‐β 42 (Aβ42) aggregation and neuroinflammation. Due to their drawbacks, arising from poor pharmacokinetics, rapid metabolism, and even instability in aqueous medium, the biological activity of azobenzene compounds carrying a pharmacophoric catechol group, which have been designed as bioisoteres of curcumin has been examined. Molecular simulations reveal the ability of these compounds to form a hydrophobic cluster with Aβ42, which adopts different folds, affecting the propensity to populate fibril‐like conformations. Furthermore, the curcumin bioisosteres exceeded the parent compound in activity against Aβ42 aggregation inhibition, glutamate‐induced intracellular oxidative stress in HT22 cells, and neuroinflammation in microglial BV‐2 cells. The most active compound prevented apoptosis of HT22 cells at a concentration of 2.5 μm (83 % cell survival), whereas curcumin only showed very low protection at 10 μm (21 % cell survival). KW - amyloid beta KW - bioisosterism KW - natural products KW - neuroprotectivity KW - replica-exchange molecular dynamics Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-238988 VL - 27 IS - 19 SP - 6015 EP - 6027 ER - TY - THES A1 - Gunesch, Sandra T1 - Molecular Mode of Action of Flavonoids: From Neuroprotective Hybrids to Molecular Probes for Chemical Proteomics T1 - Wirkmechanismen von Flavonoiden: Von neuroprotektiven Hybriden zu Sonden für chemische Proteomik N2 - Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, and currently, there is no treatment to cure or halt disease progression. Because the one-target strategy focusing on amyloid-β has failed to generate successful pharmaceutical treatment, this work studies natural products with pleiotropic effects focusing on oxidative stress and neuroinflammation as key drivers of disease progression. The central part of this work focused on flavonoids as neuroprotectants. 7-O-Esters of taxifolin and cinnamic or ferulic acid were synthesized and investigated towards their neuroprotective potential addressing aging and disease. 7-O-Feruloyl- and 7-O-cinnamoyltaxifolin showed overadditive effects in oxidative stress-induced assays in the mouse neuronal cell line HT22 and proved to be protective against neuroinflammation in microglial BV-2 cells. The overadditive effect translated to animals using an Aβ25-35-induced memory-impaired AD mouse model where the compounds were able to ameliorate short-term memory defects. While the disease-modifying effects in vivo were observed, the detailed mechanisms of action and intracellular targets of the compounds remained unclear. Hence, a chemical probe of the neuroprotective flavonoid ester 7-O-cinnamoyltaxifolin was developed and applied in an activity-based protein profiling approach. SERCA and ANT-1 were identified as potential targets. Further, chemical modifications on the flavonoids taxifolin, quercetin, and fisetin were performed. The achievements of this work are an important contribution to the use of secondary plant metabolites as neuroprotectants. Chemical modifications increased the neuroprotective effect of the natural products, and distinct intracellular pathways involved in the neuroprotective mechanisms were identified. The results of this work support the use of secondary plant metabolites as potential therapeutics and hint towards new pharmacological targets for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders. N2 - Morbus Alzheimer ist die häufigste Form der Demenz und derzeit unheilbar. Die auf das Amyloidprotein fokussierte Medikamentenforschung konnte nicht zu einer erfolgreichen Therapie führen. In dieser Arbeit wurden Naturstoffe mit pleiotropischer Wirkung untersucht, die oxidativen Stress und Neuroinflammation als Schlüsselrollen für den Fortschritt der Krankheit adressieren. Das Flavonoid Taxifolin wurde in Position 7 mit Ferula- oder Zimtsäure verestert und hinsichtlich der neuroprotektiven Eigenschaften untersucht. Die Substanzen zeigten in Untersuchungen zu oxidativem Stress in der hippocampalen Mauszelllinie HT22 und in Untersuchungen neuronaler Entzündungsprozesse in BV-2 Mikroglia Zellen überadditive protektive Wirkung. Diese ließ sich auch auf ein Tiermodell übertragen. In einem Alzheimer Mausmodell konnten Beeinträchtigungen des Kurzzeitgedächtnisses durch die Verabreichung der Taxifolin-Zimtsäure- und -Ferulasäureester behoben werden. Trotz des krankheitsmodifizierenden Effekts in vivo sind die molekularen Mechanismen der Wirkung und die intrazellulären Zielstrukturen der Substanzen weitgehend unbekannt. Um dieses Problem zu adressieren, wurde eine chemische Sonde des Taxifolin-Zimtsäureesters entwickelt und synthetisiert, um Interaktionen der Substanz mit intrazellulären Proteinen mittels der sogenannten Activity Based Protein Profiling Methode aufzuklären. Hierbei konnten SERCA und ANT-1 als potenzielle Interaktionspartner identifiziert werden. Des Weiteren wurden chemische Modifikationen an den Flavonoiden Taxifolin, Quercetin und Fisetin durchgeführt. Die Erkenntnisse dieser Arbeit leisten einen wichtigen Beitrag zu der Verwendung von pflanzlichen Sekundärmetaboliten als Substanzen mit neuroprotektiven Eigenschaften. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit unterstützen die Entwicklung naturstoffbasierter Therapeutika, die dringend benötigt werden, um neue Strategien für die Behandlung komplexer, neurodegenerativer Erkrankungen hervorzubringen. KW - Flavonoide KW - Morbus Alzheimer KW - Alzheimerkrankheit KW - Flavonoide KW - Neuroprotektivum Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-239360 ER -