Small-molecule dissolution of stress granules by redox modulation benefits ALS models.

Uechi H, Sridharan S, Nijssen J, Bilstein J, Iglesias-Artola JM, Kishigami S, Casablancas-Antras V, Poser I, Martinez EJ, Boczek E, Wagner M, Tomschke N
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et al

Neurodegenerative diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, are often associated with mutations in stress granule proteins. Aberrant stress granule condensate formation is associated with disease, making it a potential target for pharmacological intervention. Here, we identified lipoamide, a small molecule that specifically prevents cytoplasmic condensation of stress granule proteins. Thermal proteome profiling showed that lipoamide stabilizes intrinsically disordered domain-containing proteins, including SRSF1 and SFPQ, which are stress granule proteins necessary for lipoamide activity. SFPQ has redox-state-specific condensate dissolving behavior, which is modulated by the redox-active lipoamide dithiolane ring. In animals, lipoamide ameliorates aging-associated aggregation of a stress granule reporter protein, improves neuronal morphology and recovers motor defects caused by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-associated FUS and TDP-43 mutants. Thus, lipoamide is a well-tolerated small-molecule modulator of stress granule condensation, and dissection of its molecular mechanism identified a cellular pathway for redox regulation of stress granule formation.

Keywords:

Animals

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Humans

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Mice

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Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

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Disease Models, Animal

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Oxidation-Reduction

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Small Molecule Libraries

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Stress Granules