1 research outputs found
High-Content Microfluidic Screening Platform Used To Identify σ2R/Tmem97 Binding Ligands that Reduce Age-Dependent Neurodegeneration in <i>C. elegans</i> SC_APP Model
The nematode <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i>, with tractable
genetics and a well-defined nervous system, provides a unique whole-animal
model system to identify novel drug targets and therapies for neurodegenerative
diseases. Large-scale drug or target screens in models that recapitulate
the subtle age- and cell-specific aspects of neurodegenerative diseases
are limited by a technological requirement for high-throughput analysis
of neuronal morphology. Recently, we developed a single-copy model
of amyloid precursor protein (SC_APP) induced neurodegeneration that
exhibits progressive degeneration of select cholinergic neurons. Our
previous work with this model suggests that small molecule ligands
of the sigma 2 receptor (σ2R), which was recently cloned and
identified as transmembrane protein 97 (TMEM97), are neuroprotective.
To determine structure–activity relationships for unexplored
chemical space in our σ2R/Tmem97 ligand collection, we developed
an in vivo high-content screening (HCS) assay to identify potential
drug leads. The HCS assay uses our recently developed large-scale
microfluidic immobilization chip and automated imaging platform. We
discovered norbenzomorphans that reduced neurodegeneration in our <i>C. elegans</i> model, including two compounds that demonstrated
significant neuroprotective activity at multiple doses. These findings
provide further evidence that σ2R/Tmem97-binding norbenzomorphans
may represent a new drug class for treating neurodegenerative diseases