PUBLICATION

Methylene blue fails to inhibit Tau and polyglutamine protein dependent toxicity in zebrafish

Authors
van Bebber, F., Paquet, D., Hruscha, A., Schmid, B., and Haass, C.
ID
ZDB-PUB-100420-9
Date
2010
Source
Neurobiology of disease   39(3): 265-271 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Haass, Christian, Hruscha, Alexander, Paquet, Dominik, Schmid, Bettina, van Bebber, Frauke
Keywords
Methylene blue, Neurodegeneration, Alzheimer's disease, Frontotemporal dementia, Huntington's disease, Huntingtin, Tau, Zebrafish
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Animals, Genetically Modified/metabolism
  • Axons/drug effects
  • Blotting, Western
  • Cell Death/drug effects*
  • Fluorescent Antibody Technique
  • Methylene Blue/pharmacology*
  • Neurons/drug effects*
  • Neurons/metabolism
  • Peptides/genetics
  • Peptides/metabolism*
  • Phosphorylation/drug effects
  • Tauopathies/genetics
  • Tauopathies/metabolism*
  • Zebrafish/genetics
  • Zebrafish/metabolism
  • tau Proteins/genetics
  • tau Proteins/metabolism*
PubMed
20381619 Full text @ Neurobiol. Dis.
Abstract
Methylene blue is an FDA approved compound with a variety of pharmacologic activities. It inhibits aggregation of several amyloidogenic proteins known to be deposited in neurodegenerative diseases. Recently, it has been proposed that methylene blue shows significant beneficial effects in a phase 2 clinical trial by slowing cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease patients. To analyze its therapeutic potential, we investigated the effect of methylene blue on neurotoxicity in a zebrafish model for tauopathies. Transgenic expression of the frontotemporal dementia associated Tau-P301L mutation recapitulates a number of the pathological features observed in humans including abnormal phosphorylation and folding of Tau, tangle formation and Tau-dependent neuronal loss. Upon incubation of zebrafish larvae with methylene blue, neither abnormal phosphorylation nor neuronal cell loss, reduced neurite outgrowth or a swimming defect were rescued. Methylene blue is biologically active in zebrafish since it reduced aggregation of a huntingtin variant containing a stretch of 102 glutamine residues. However, although huntingtin aggregation was largely prevented by methylene blue, huntingtin-dependent toxicity was unaffected. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that toxicity is not necessarily associated with deposition of insoluble amyloid proteins.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping