Abstract

Tideglusib is a GSK-3 inhibitor currently in phase II clinical trials for the treatment of Alzheimer disease and progressive supranuclear palsy. Sustained oral administration of the compound to a variety of animal models decreases Tau hyperphosphorylation, lowers brain amyloid plaque load, improves learning and memory, and prevents neuronal loss. We report here that tideglusib inhibits GSK-3β irreversibly, as demonstrated by the lack of recovery in enzyme function after the unbound drug has been removed from the reaction medium and the fact that its dissociation rate constant is non-significantly different from zero. Such irreversibility may explain the non-competitive inhibition pattern with respect to ATP shown by tideglusib and perhaps other structurally related compounds. The replacement of Cys-199 by an Ala residue in the enzyme seems to increase the dissociation rate, although the drug retains its inhibitory activity with decreased potency and long residence time. In addition, tideglusib failed to inhibit a series of kinases that contain a Cys homologous to Cys-199 in their active site, suggesting that its inhibition of GSK-3β obeys to a specific mechanism and is not a consequence of nonspecific reactivity. Results obtained with [(35)S]tideglusib do not support unequivocally the existence of a covalent bond between the drug and GSK-3β. The irreversibility of the inhibition and the very low protein turnover rate observed for the enzyme are particularly relevant from a pharmacological perspective and could have significant implications on its therapeutic potential.

Highlights

  • Tideglusib is a GSK-3 inhibitor currently undergoing clinical trials for Alzheimer disease and progressive supranuclear palsy

  • Our data demonstrate that tideglusib is an irreversible inhibitor of GSK-3␤

  • The fluorography obtained after SDS-PAGE of preincubated mixtures of [35S]tideglusib and GSK-3␤ revealed very weak bands only for the DTE-untreated samples, but the faint intensity of these bands is not consistent with the amount of protein loaded and the specific activity of the radiolabeled drug

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Summary

Background

Tideglusib is a GSK-3 inhibitor currently undergoing clinical trials for Alzheimer disease and progressive supranuclear palsy. We report here that tideglusib inhibits GSK-3␤ irreversibly, as demonstrated by the lack of recovery in enzyme function after the unbound drug has been removed from the reaction medium and the fact that its dissociation rate constant is non-significantly different from zero. Strategies focused on the alterations suffered by Tau protein have received relatively little attention until recently despite the fact that the presence of extensive Tau pathology is central to the disease In this context, glycogen synthase kinase-3␤ has recently been proposed as a link between the two major pathological pathways in AD, amyloid and Tau (6 – 8), leading to the “GSK-3 hypothesis of AD” [9]. The potential pharmacodynamic implications of this mechanism are discussed

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