Author:
Purkey Hans E.,Dorrell Michael I.,Kelly Jeffery W.
Abstract
Transthyretin (TTR) tetramer dissociation and misfolding facilitate
assembly into amyloid fibrils that putatively cause senile systemic
amyloidosis and familial amyloid polyneuropathy. We have previously
discovered more than 50 small molecules that bind to and stabilize
tetrameric TTR, inhibiting amyloid fibril formation in
vitro. A method is presented here to evaluate the binding
selectivity of these inhibitors to TTR in human plasma, a complex
biological fluid composed of more than 60 proteins and numerous small
molecules. Our immunoprecipitation approach isolates TTR and bound
small molecules from a biological fluid such as plasma, and quantifies
the amount of small molecules bound to the protein by HPLC analysis.
This approach demonstrates that only a small subset of the inhibitors
that saturate the TTR binding sites in vitro do so in
plasma. These selective inhibitors can now be tested in animal models
of TTR amyloid disease to probe the validity of the amyloid hypothesis.
This method could be easily extended to evaluate small molecule binding
selectivity to any protein in a given biological fluid without the
necessity of determining or guessing which other protein components may
be competitors. This is a central issue to understanding the
distribution, metabolism, activity, and toxicity of potential drugs.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences