Structure-activity relationship of tocopherol derivatives suggesting a novel non-antioxidant mechanism in antiprion potency

Neuroscience Letters
Janine MuyrersCarsten Korth

Abstract

Beneficial effects of tocopherols, or vitamin E, on degenerative brain conditions have been attributed mainly to their antioxidant effects. Non-antioxidant effects of the tocopherols have been shown to be mediated by inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC) signaling. Prion disease is a paradigmatic protein conformational disease characterized by the induced conversion of a normal host protein PrP(C) to adopt a pathogenic conformation PrP(Sc). The molecular regulation of prion replication is poorly understood. Here, we show that tocopherols inhibit prion replication by a structure-activity relationship for antiprion activity independent of antioxidant activity with tocopherol succinate (TS) posessing highest EC(50) at 7 microM. Only TS but not an equally antiprion active PKC inhibitor could be partially antagonized by substochiometric 1 nM rapamycin suggesting that there are pathways via mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) that interfere with tocopherol's biological effects. Interaction with the mTOR pathway is a yet undescribed characteristic of tocopherol derivatives, potentially significant for pathophysiological processes other than prion propagation.

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Citations

Mar 27, 2013·Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition·P F Surai
Dec 15, 2018·IUBMB Life·Fatemeh Khadangi, Angelo Azzi

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