Fasudil inhibits α-synuclein aggregation through ROCK-inhibition-mediated mechanisms

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Advisors

Tutors

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier
Metrics
Google Scholar
lacobus
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

ROCK inhibitors such as fasudil protected against dopaminergic degeneration and other neurodegenerative processes in several experimental models through inhibition of neuroinflammation and activation of survival signaling pathways, and clinical trials have been initiated. More recently, fasudil has been suggested to inhibit α-synuclein aggregation. However, this is controversial, particularly if it is a consequence of direct binding of the fasudil molecule to α-synuclein. We studied the mechanisms involved in the effects of fasudil on α-synuclein aggregation using the α-synuclein-T/V5-synphilin-1 model. Molecule-molecule interactions were studied using real time quaking inducing conversion (RT-QuiC). Fasudil decreased the number of cells with inclusions and the size of inclusions in dopaminergic neurons and glial cells, and inhibited α-synuclein aggregation and microglial endocytosis of aggregates. These changes were not due to changes in α-synuclein protein expression or phosphorylation and were related to ROCK inhibition rather than direct interaction with α-synuclein, as confirmed with a second ROCK inhibitor (Y27632) and ROCK gene silencing. We observed that ROCK inhibition downregulates several factors that are known to promote α-synuclein aggregation such as NADPH-oxidase-derived oxidative stress, intracellular calcium increase, and α-synuclein endocytosis, and promotes autophagy. The present results support that fasudil is a useful drug against Parkinson's disease progression. In addition to other reported neuroprotective properties, fasudil inhibits α-synuclein aggregation and microglial endocytosis of aggregates, which enhances the microglial inflammatory response. The effects of fasudil are mostly related to ROCK inhibition, which we have shown using two structurally different ROCK inhibitors and knockdown data, and further supported by using RT-QuiC.

Description

Bibliographic citation

Neurotherapeutics Volume 22, Issue 2, March 2025, e00544

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2021-126848NB-I00; PLEC2022-009401; PID2023-150743OB-I00), Instituto de Salud Carlos III (RD21/0017/0031 and CIBERNED), Galician Government (XUGA, ED431C 2022/41) and FEDER (Regional European Development Fund).

Rights

© 2025 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of American Society for Experimental NeuroTherapeutics. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International