Phenotypic screening for small molecules that lower PrP in cultured cells

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Abstract

PrP lowering is a validated therapeutic hypothesis in prion disease. To identify small molecules that reduce PrP levels, we performed phenotypic screening in cultured cells. To prioritize PrP specificity in our primary screen, we generated mouse N2a cells stably expressing GFP and used high content imaging analysis to select compounds that lowered PrP without affecting GFP signal or cell viability. Screening a curated library of 3,492 compounds with annotated mechanisms of action identified two small molecules, EYH (PubChem CID: 71678945) and LCZ (PubChem CID: 24970350), that selectively and dose-dependently lowered PrP. Proteomics on whole cell lysates identified PrP as the #1 or #2 most potently downregulated out of 8,722 proteins detected. Both compounds minimally affected Prnp mRNA, reduced expression of exogenously transfected PrP, and remained potent in non-dividing primary cells, consistent with a post-translational mechanism. Co-treatment with the proteasome inhibitor MG132 yielded accumulation of unglycosylated PrP, demonstrating proteasome clearance of PrP. However, both compounds showed limited or no activity in human cell lines, and failed to reduce PrP in vivo after 14 days of treatment. These findings highlight the challenges associated with mechanism-agnostic phenotypic screening for PrP-lowering compounds and support prioritizing compounds with known mechanisms of action.

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