Dense Shell Glycodendrimers as Potential Nontoxic Anti-amyloidogenic Agents in Alzheimer's Disease. Amyloid-Dendrimer Aggregates Morphology and Cell Toxicity

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Oxana Klementieva - , Autonomous University of Barcelona (Author)
  • Nuria Benseny-Cases - , Autonomous University of Barcelona (Author)
  • Alejandro Gella - , International University of Catalonia (Author)
  • Dietmar Appelhans - , Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research Dresden (Author)
  • Brigitte Voit - , Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research Dresden (Author)
  • Josep Cladera - , Autonomous University of Barcelona (Author)

Abstract

Dendrimers have been proved to interact with amyloids, although most of dendrimers assayed in amyloidogenic systems are toxic to cells. The development of glycodendrimers, poly(propyleneimine) (PPI) dendrimers decorated with maltose (Mal), represents the possibility of using dendrimers with a low intrinsic toxicity. In the present paper we show that fourth (PPI-G4-Mal) and fifth (PPI-G5-Mal) generation glycodendrimers have the capacity to interfere with Alzheimer's amyloid peptide A beta(1-40) fibrilization. The interaction is generation dependent: PPI-G5-Mal blocks amyloid fibril formation generating granular nonfibrillar amorphous aggregates, whereas PPI-G4-Mal generates clumped fibrils at low dendrimer peptide ratios and amorphous aggregates at high ratios. Both PPI-G4-Mal and PPI-G5-Mal are nontoxic to PC12 and SH-SY5Y cells. PPI-G4-Mal reduces, amyloid toxicity by clumping fibrils together, whereas amorphous aggregates are toxic to PC12 cells. The results show that glycodendrimers are promising nontoxic agents in the search for anti-amyloidogenic compounds. Fibril clumping may be an anti-amyloid toxicity strategy.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3903-3909
Number of pages7
JournalBiomacromolecules
Volume12
Issue number11
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2011
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

PubMed 21936579
Scopus 81255152309
ORCID /0000-0002-4531-691X/work/148607846

Keywords

Keywords

  • Peptides, Oligomers, Growth