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Levosimendan inhibits disulfide tau oligomerization and ameliorates tau pathology in Tau P301L -BiFC mice.

Sungsu LimSeulgi ShinYoonsik SungHa Eun LeeKyu Hyeon KimJi Yeon SongGwan-Ho LeeHira AzizNataliia LukianenkoDong Min KangNicolette BoesenHyeanjeong JeongAizhan AbdildinovaJunghee LeeByung-Yong YuSang Min LimJun-Seok LeeHoon RyuAe Nim PaeYun Kyung Kim
Published in: Experimental & molecular medicine (2023)
Tau oligomers play critical roles in tau pathology and are responsible for neuronal cell death and transmitting the disease in the brain. Accordingly, preventing tau oligomerization has become an important therapeutic strategy to treat tauopathies, including Alzheimer's disease. However, progress has been slow because detecting tau oligomers in the cellular context is difficult. Working toward tau-targeted drug discovery, our group has developed a tau-BiFC platform to monitor and quantify tau oligomerization. By using the tau-BiFC platform, we screened libraries with FDA-approved and passed phase I drugs and identified levosimendan as a potent anti-tau agent that inhibits tau oligomerization. 14 C-isotope labeling of levosimendan revealed that levosimendan covalently bound to tau cysteines, directly inhibiting disulfide-linked tau oligomerization. In addition, levosimendan disassembles tau oligomers into monomers, rescuing neurons from aggregation states. In comparison, the well-known anti-tau agents methylene blue and LMTM failed to protect neurons from tau-mediated toxicity, generating high-molecular-weight tau oligomers. Levosimendan displayed robust potency against tau oligomerization and rescued cognitive declines induced by tauopathy in the Tau P301L -BiFC mouse model. Our data present the potential of levosimendan as a disease-modifying drug for tauopathies.
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