Tranilast Binds to Aβ Monomers and Promotes
Aβ Fibrillation
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Abstract
The
antiallergy and potential anticancer drug tranilast has been patented
for treating Alzheimer’s disease (AD), in which amyloid β-protein
(Aβ) plays a key pathogenic role. We used solution NMR to determine
that tranilast binds to Aβ40 monomers with ∼300 μM
affinity. Remarkably, tranilast increases Aβ40 fibrillation
more than 20-fold in the thioflavin T assay at a 1:1 molar ratio,
as well as significantly reducing the lag time. Tranilast likely promotes
fibrillation by shifting Aβ monomer conformations to those capable
of seed formation and fibril elongation. Molecular docking results
qualitatively agree with NMR chemical shift perturbation, which together
indicate that hydrophobic interactions are the major driving force
of the Aβ–tranilast interaction. These data suggest that
AD may be a potential complication for tranilast usage in elderly
patients