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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Ebke A, Luebbers T, Fukumori A, Shirotani K, Haass C, Baumann K, Steiner H. Novel γ-secretase enzyme modulators directly target presenilin protein. J Biol Chem. 2011 Oct 28;286(43):37181-6. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Todd E. Golde
Submitted 16 September 2011  |  Permalink Posted 16 September 2011

My take is that this is fundamentally sound but that some GSMs clearly interact with substrate. Ultimately, I think the truth will be that there will be flavors of GSMs that interact with substrate, substrate and presenilin/γ-secretase, and combinations of these with lipid membrane interactions. Indeed, competition studies show only partial competition.

View all comments by Todd E. Golde

  Comment by:  Taisuke Tomita
Submitted 16 September 2011  |  Permalink Posted 16 September 2011

This is an intriguing paper suggesting that highly potent, second-generation GSMs directly target the N-terminal fragment of presenilin (PS), the catalytic engine of the γ-secretase complex. After the possibility was raised that NSAID-based GSMs target the substrate, several studies regarding the molecular action of GSMs have been reported. However, the specificity of these compounds was questioned, as the first-generation GSMs showed very low potency (over 100 microM for IC50). Moreover, these GSMs affected the structure of PS revealed by FLIM (Lleó et al., 2004).

Here, Ebke et al. in collaboration with Roche used a novel photoaffinity probe with excellent potency and clearly showed that PS is a direct target. This is consistent with the study by TorreyPines (Kounnas et al., 2010) that immobilized GSMs bound with the PS1-NTF and Pen-2. Moreover, we also reported that GSM-1, which is an acidic phenylpiperidine GSM with excellent potency, directly targets to PS NTF (Ohki et al., SfN...  Read more


  Comment by:  Bruno Bulic, Sascha Weggen
Submitted 19 September 2011  |  Permalink Posted 19 September 2011

Comment by Sascha Weggen, Thorsten Jumpertz, Andreas Rennhack, Bruno Bulic
Despite substantial progress in the chemical and preclinical development of γ-secretase modulators (GSMs), the molecular mechanism and target of GSMs have remained controversial. The first GSMs were discovered in the class of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and displayed only low potency in the micromolar range. Subsequently, GSMs with nanomolar potency and favorable pharmacological properties have been reported in two major structural classes: carboxylic acids with structural similarities to NSAIDs (acidic GSMs), and compounds based on bridged aromatics that do not resemble NSAIDs and lack a carboxylic acid group (non-acidic GSMs). Earlier binding studies with a photo-probe based on the low-potency NSAID GSM flurbiprofen suggested targeting of the substrate APP (Kukar et al., 2008). In contrast, affinity purification studies with a potent non-acidic GSM identified a GSM binding site in the γ-secretase subunit PEN2 (Kounnas et al., 2010). However, these last experiments were...  Read more

  Comment by:  Jean-Francois Blain (Disclosure), Gerhard Koenig
Submitted 24 September 2011  |  Permalink Posted 24 September 2011

Amelie Ebke and colleagues' new report on the binding of γ-secretase modulators (GSMs) directly to presenilin is a big step in the understanding of how these small molecules can modulate the enzyme's activity.

This study definitively identifies the N-terminal fragment of presenilin (PS-NTF) as the binding site of GSMs, confirming previous studies that had identified γ-secretase more generically as the binding site of those compounds. As for the previous reports of carboxylic acid GSMs (sulindac sulfide, flurbiprofen) binding to APP, recent studies seem to confirm this interaction (Sagi et al., 2011; Kukar et al., 2011) but the report by Ebke and colleagues also shows that sulindac sulfide can compete binding of the second-generation non-acid GSM photoprobe on PS-NTF. This apparent discrepancy might actually be the result of binding promiscuity of sulindac sulfide and could potentially account for its lower potency.

Interestingly, Taisuke Tomita and Takeshi Iwatsubo from the University of Tokyo, using a similar approach (as...  Read more

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