Abstract
Soluble oligomeric forms of Amyloid-β (Aβ) are considered the major toxic species leading to the neurodegeneration underlying Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Therefore, drugs that prevent oligomer formation might be promising. The atypical dipeptide GAL-201 is orally bioavailable and interferes as a modulator of Aβ aggregation. It binds to aggregation-prone, misfolded Aβ monomers with high selectivity and affinity, thereby preventing the formation of toxic oligomers. Here, we demonstrate that the previously observed protective effect of GAL-201 on synaptic plasticity occurs irrespective of shortages and post-translational modifications (tested isoforms: Aβ1–42, Aβ(p3-42), Aβ1–40 and 3NTyr(10)-Aβ). Interestingly, the neuroprotective activity of a single dose of GAL-201 was still present after one week and correlated with a prevention of Aβ-induced spine loss. Furthermore, we could observe beneficial effects on spine morphology as well as the significantly reduced activation of proinflammatory microglia and astrocytes in the presence of an Aβ1–42-derived toxicity. In line with these in vitro data, GAL-201 additionally improved hippocampus-dependent spatial learning in the “tgArcSwe” AD mouse model after a single subcutaneous administration. By this means, we observed changes in the deposition pattern: through the clustering of misfolded monomers as off-pathway non-toxic Aβ agglomerates, toxic oligomers are removed. Our results are in line with previously collected preclinical data and warrant the initiation of Investigational New Drug (IND)-enabling studies for GAL-201. By demonstrating the highly efficient detoxification of β-sheet monomers, leading to the neutralization of Aβ oligomer toxicity, GAL-201 represents a promising drug candidate against Aβ-derived pathophysiology present in AD.
Author supplied keywords
- 3NTyr(10)-Aβ)
- Alzheimer’s disease
- Aβ(p3-42)
- Aβ1–40
- activation of microglia and astrocytes
- amyloid-β-aggregation-inhibitor
- amyloid-β-induced spine loss
- modulation of amyloid-β-aggregation
- neurodegenerative diseases
- neuroinflammation
- neuroprotection
- off-pathway aggregation
- prion-like mechanism
- small molecule
- synaptic plasticity
- tgArcSwe mice
- toxic oligomers
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Riemann, K., von Ahsen, J., Böhm, T., Schlegel, M., Kreuzer, M., Fenzl, T., … Rammes, G. (2025). GAL-201 as a Promising Amyloid-β-Targeting Small-Molecule Approach for Alzheimer’s Disease Treatment: Consistent Effects on Synaptic Plasticity, Behavior and Neuroinflammation. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 26(9). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26094167
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