Thakker Deepak R, Sankaranarayanan Sethu, Weatherspoon Marcy R, Harrison Jonathan, Pierdomenico Maria, Heisel Jennifer M, Thompson Lorin A, Haskell Roy, Grace James E, Taylor Sarah J, Albright Charles F, Shafer Lisa L
Neuromodulation Global Research, Technology & Development.
Neuroscience.
J Neurosci. 2015 Apr 29;35(17):6931-6. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2262-14.2015.
Multiple small-molecule inhibitors of the β-secretase enzyme (BACE1) are under preclinical or clinical investigation for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Prior work has illustrated robust lowering of central amyloid β (Aβ) after acute administration of BACE1 inhibitors. However, very few studies have assessed the overall impact of chronically administered BACE1 inhibitors on brain amyloid burden, neuropathology, and behavioral function in aged preclinical models. We investigated the effects of a potent nonbrain-penetrant BACE1 inhibitor, delivered directly to the brain using intracerebroventricular infusion in an aged transgenic mouse model. Intracerebroventricular infusion of the BACE1 inhibitor (0.3-23.5 μg/d) for 8 weeks, initiated in 17-month-old Tg2576 mice, produced dose-dependent increases in brain inhibitor concentrations (0.2-13 μm). BACE1 inhibition significantly reversed the behavioral deficit in contextual fear conditioning, and reduced brain Aβ levels, plaque burden, and associated pathology (e.g., dystrophic neurites), with maximal effects attained with ∼1 μg/d dose. Strikingly, the BACE1 inhibitor also reversed amyloid pathology below baseline levels (amyloid burden at the start of treatment), without adversely affecting cerebral amyloid angiopathy, microhemorrhages, myelination, or neuromuscular function. Inhibitor-mediated decline in brain amyloid pathology was associated with an increase in microglial ramification. This is the first demonstration of chronically administered BACE1 inhibitor to activate microglia, reverse brain amyloid pathology, and elicit functional improvement in an aged transgenic mouse model. Thus, engagement of novel glial-mediated clearance mechanisms may drive disease-modifying therapeutic benefit with BACE1 inhibition in AD.
多种β-分泌酶(BACE1)小分子抑制剂正处于阿尔茨海默病(AD)的临床前或临床研究阶段。先前的研究表明,急性给予BACE1抑制剂后,中枢淀粉样β蛋白(Aβ)水平会显著降低。然而,很少有研究评估长期给予BACE1抑制剂对老年临床前模型脑淀粉样蛋白负荷、神经病理学和行为功能的总体影响。我们在老年转基因小鼠模型中,通过脑室内注射直接将一种强效的非脑渗透性BACE1抑制剂输送到大脑,研究其效果。在17月龄的Tg2576小鼠中,脑室内注射BACE1抑制剂(0.3 - 23.5μg/天),持续8周,可使脑内抑制剂浓度呈剂量依赖性增加(0.2 - 13μm)。BACE1抑制作用显著逆转了情境恐惧条件反射中的行为缺陷,并降低了脑Aβ水平、斑块负荷及相关病理学改变(如营养不良性神经突),在剂量约为1μg/天时达到最大效果。令人惊讶的是,BACE1抑制剂还能将淀粉样蛋白病理学改变逆转至基线水平以下(治疗开始时的淀粉样蛋白负荷),且不会对脑淀粉样血管病、微出血、髓鞘形成或神经肌肉功能产生不利影响。抑制剂介导的脑淀粉样蛋白病理学改变的下降与小胶质细胞分支增加有关。这是首次证明在老年转基因小鼠模型中,长期给予BACE1抑制剂可激活小胶质细胞、逆转脑淀粉样蛋白病理学改变并引发功能改善。因此,新型胶质细胞介导的清除机制的参与可能推动BACE1抑制在AD中产生疾病修饰治疗益处。