Mary C Catanese, Yvonne E Klingl, Tonya M Gilbert, Martin G Strebl-Bantillo, Christina R Hartigan, Monica Schenone, Jacob M Hooker
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Initiation of research programs to investigate binding specificity based on in vivo positron emission tomography (PET) imaging results can provide rich opportunities to improve data interpretation, gain biological insight, and inform hypothesis development. Here, we profile the binding specificity of the neuroepigenetic imaging probe, [11C]Martinostat. In vivo neuroimaging studies using [11C]Martinostat have uncovered differential regional uptake in relation to age and biological sex and in patients with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, Alzheimer's disease, and low-back pain compared to healthy controls. Previous studies using recombinant proteins and thermal shift assays in postmortem tissue indicate that [11C]Martinostat engages class I and putatively class IIb histone deacetylases (HDACs). While HDACs serve multiple functions, including regulation of chromatin remodeling and gene transcription, it is not known how differences in HDAC expression may arise across brain regions. HDACs functionally interact with a diverse array of multisubunit complexes, and engagement with associated binding partners may contribute to these differences. To further assess target engagement of [11C]Martinostat, we designed a synthetic probe based on the inhibitor structural scaffold for use in competition experiments followed by proteomic analysis in postmortem tissue. The synthetic probe, called Compound 4, appears to interact with the class I HDAC paralog HDAC2 and the class IIb paralog HDAC6 in a robust manner. We also uncovered unique interacting partners, including synaptic proteins from the synaptotagmin (SYT) family of proteins and neuronal pentraxin 2 (NPTX2). Further work to investigate HDAC associations with interacting proteins across regions of the human brain is needed to better understand neuroepigenetic dysregulation in psychiatric and neurological conditions.
期刊介绍:
ACS Chemical Neuroscience publishes high-quality research articles and reviews that showcase chemical, quantitative biological, biophysical and bioengineering approaches to the understanding of the nervous system and to the development of new treatments for neurological disorders. Research in the journal focuses on aspects of chemical neurobiology and bio-neurochemistry such as the following:
Neurotransmitters and receptors
Neuropharmaceuticals and therapeutics
Neural development—Plasticity, and degeneration
Chemical, physical, and computational methods in neuroscience
Neuronal diseases—basis, detection, and treatment
Mechanism of aging, learning, memory and behavior
Pain and sensory processing
Neurotoxins
Neuroscience-inspired bioengineering
Development of methods in chemical neurobiology
Neuroimaging agents and technologies
Animal models for central nervous system diseases
Behavioral research