US20040185429A1 - Method for discovering neurogenic agents - Google Patents

Method for discovering neurogenic agents Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20040185429A1
US20040185429A1 US10/728,652 US72865203A US2004185429A1 US 20040185429 A1 US20040185429 A1 US 20040185429A1 US 72865203 A US72865203 A US 72865203A US 2004185429 A1 US2004185429 A1 US 2004185429A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
neurogenesis
neurons
neural progenitor
vol
cells
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US10/728,652
Inventor
Judith Kelleher-Andersson
Karl Johe
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US10/728,652 priority Critical patent/US20040185429A1/en
Publication of US20040185429A1 publication Critical patent/US20040185429A1/en
Priority to US11/852,922 priority patent/US8293488B2/en
Priority to US13/658,623 priority patent/US20130045487A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07DHETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07D239/00Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings
    • C07D239/02Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings
    • C07D239/24Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings having three or more double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members
    • C07D239/28Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings having three or more double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members with hetero atoms or with carbon atoms having three bonds to hetero atoms with at the most one bond to halogen, directly attached to ring carbon atoms
    • C07D239/46Two or more oxygen, sulphur or nitrogen atoms
    • C07D239/48Two nitrogen atoms
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/435Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom
    • A61K31/4353Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom ortho- or peri-condensed with heterocyclic ring systems
    • A61K31/437Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom ortho- or peri-condensed with heterocyclic ring systems the heterocyclic ring system containing a five-membered ring having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. indolizine, beta-carboline
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/435Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with one nitrogen as the only ring hetero atom
    • A61K31/44Non condensed pyridines; Hydrogenated derivatives thereof
    • A61K31/445Non condensed piperidines, e.g. piperocaine
    • A61K31/4523Non condensed piperidines, e.g. piperocaine containing further heterocyclic ring systems
    • A61K31/4545Non condensed piperidines, e.g. piperocaine containing further heterocyclic ring systems containing a six-membered ring with nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. pipamperone, anabasine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/495Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with two or more nitrogen atoms as the only ring heteroatoms, e.g. piperazine or tetrazines
    • A61K31/4985Pyrazines or piperazines ortho- or peri-condensed with heterocyclic ring systems
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/33Heterocyclic compounds
    • A61K31/395Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
    • A61K31/495Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with two or more nitrogen atoms as the only ring heteroatoms, e.g. piperazine or tetrazines
    • A61K31/505Pyrimidines; Hydrogenated pyrimidines, e.g. trimethoprim
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K35/00Medicinal preparations containing materials or reaction products thereof with undetermined constitution
    • A61K35/12Materials from mammals; Compositions comprising non-specified tissues or cells; Compositions comprising non-embryonic stem cells; Genetically modified cells
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/04Centrally acting analgesics, e.g. opioids
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/14Drugs for disorders of the nervous system for treating abnormal movements, e.g. chorea, dyskinesia
    • A61P25/16Anti-Parkinson drugs
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/18Antipsychotics, i.e. neuroleptics; Drugs for mania or schizophrenia
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/22Anxiolytics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/24Antidepressants
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • A61P25/28Drugs for disorders of the nervous system for treating neurodegenerative disorders of the central nervous system, e.g. nootropic agents, cognition enhancers, drugs for treating Alzheimer's disease or other forms of dementia
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07DHETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07D239/00Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings
    • C07D239/02Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings
    • C07D239/24Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings having three or more double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members
    • C07D239/28Heterocyclic compounds containing 1,3-diazine or hydrogenated 1,3-diazine rings not condensed with other rings having three or more double bonds between ring members or between ring members and non-ring members with hetero atoms or with carbon atoms having three bonds to hetero atoms with at the most one bond to halogen, directly attached to ring carbon atoms
    • C07D239/46Two or more oxygen, sulphur or nitrogen atoms
    • C07D239/48Two nitrogen atoms
    • C07D239/49Two nitrogen atoms with an aralkyl radical, or substituted aralkyl radical, attached in position 5, e.g. trimethoprim
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07DHETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07D471/00Heterocyclic compounds containing nitrogen atoms as the only ring hetero atoms in the condensed system, at least one ring being a six-membered ring with one nitrogen atom, not provided for by groups C07D451/00 - C07D463/00
    • C07D471/02Heterocyclic compounds containing nitrogen atoms as the only ring hetero atoms in the condensed system, at least one ring being a six-membered ring with one nitrogen atom, not provided for by groups C07D451/00 - C07D463/00 in which the condensed system contains two hetero rings
    • C07D471/04Ortho-condensed systems
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07DHETEROCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07D487/00Heterocyclic compounds containing nitrogen atoms as the only ring hetero atoms in the condensed system, not provided for by groups C07D451/00 - C07D477/00
    • C07D487/02Heterocyclic compounds containing nitrogen atoms as the only ring hetero atoms in the condensed system, not provided for by groups C07D451/00 - C07D477/00 in which the condensed system contains two hetero rings
    • C07D487/04Ortho-condensed systems
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics
    • G01N33/5044Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics involving specific cell types
    • G01N33/5058Neurological cells
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/5005Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells
    • G01N33/5008Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics
    • G01N33/5044Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving human or animal cells for testing or evaluating the effect of chemical or biological compounds, e.g. drugs, cosmetics involving specific cell types
    • G01N33/5073Stem cells
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/68Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving proteins, peptides or amino acids
    • G01N33/6893Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing involving proteins, peptides or amino acids related to diseases not provided for elsewhere
    • G01N33/6896Neurological disorders, e.g. Alzheimer's disease

Definitions

  • Hippocampus is the well-known center of learning, memory, and other cognitive functions, processes which new information are added, edited, stored, and recalled constantly throughout life. Since hippocampus is also the most potent neurogenic area of the brain, many studies have been undertaken to establish whether neurogenesis may be the cellular mechanism to structurally accommodate the ever-increasing volume of cognitive processing to be handled. Thus, it has been shown that at least some of the newly born neurons, marked by genetic markers, do mature to be electrophysiologically active and integrate into the existing neuronal circuitry of the hippocampus. Ablation of the neurogenesis in rats leads to decreased cognitive capabilities in several behavior tests. Thus, the existing data demonstrate that neurogenesis significantly contributes to the normal hippocampal physiology.
  • neurogenesis becomes more wide-spread and perhaps functionally diverse.
  • the newly born neurons of the subependyma also referred to as subventricular zone
  • the newly born neurons have short survival period.
  • a compound that can stimulate the endogenous neurogenesis either in a disease state or in a healthy state may be an effective drug for a number of human nervous system diseases.
  • the current limitation is the lack of an effective, predictive in vitro assay that can be used to select a neurogenic compound for clinical drug development.
  • Disclosed here is a novel, in vitro assay, which is effective and predictive, to be useful for discovering a compound that promotes neurogenesis in vivo.
  • classes of compound structures that are shown to be particularly effective in promoting the neurogenesis.
  • This invention relates to the method of discovering a neurogenic drug to treat neurologic, psychiatric, and aging-related disorders. It also relates to the use of Fused Imidazoles, Aminopyrimidines, Nicotinamides, Aminomethyl Phenoxypiperidines and Aryloxypiperidines for use as therapeutic agents and analytical reagents by means of promoting neurogenesis. More particularly this invention relates to these agents as therapeutics for prevention and treatment of neurological diseases in mammals and reagents for detecting neurogenesis and proliferation.
  • antidepressants are thought to work by increasing the levels of monoamines available for post-synaptic receptors.
  • classes of agents working apparently by the “monoaminergic hypothesis of depression” include the selective serotonin uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like fluoxetine, the mixed noradrenaline/serotonin transporter blockers like tricyclic agent imipramine and noradrenaline uptake inhibitors like desipramine.
  • SSRIs selective serotonin uptake inhibitors
  • fluoxetine the mixed noradrenaline/serotonin transporter blockers like tricyclic agent imipramine
  • noradrenaline uptake inhibitors like desipramine.
  • the antidepressant-induced increase in intraneuronal biogenic amines occurs quite rapidly.
  • the antidepressant-induced improvement in clinical behavior requires weeks of daily administration.
  • the neurogenic theory of depression though not conclusive, has strong supportive data including the finding that neurogenesis is actually requisite for antidepressant behavioral improvement in the novelty suppressed feeding model (Santarelli et al., 2003).
  • a therapeutic benefit from hippocampal neurogenesis is further supported by the finding of hippocampal atrophy in depression, where MRI imaging studies identified a reduction in the right and the left hippocampal volumes in individuals with major depression (Sheline et al., 1996; Bremner et al., 2000; Mervaala et al., 2000).
  • Neurogenesis can be characterized as three successive stages: proliferation of endogenous stem cells and precursors, differentiation into neurons and neuron maturation with formation of viable synaptic connections (plasticity).
  • the hippocampal volume loss in depression could potentially be caused by 1) inhibition of the endogenous hippocampal stem cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus, 2) inhibition of differentiation and dendrite development and 3) by loss of neurons (apoptosis) and their dendritic structure.
  • apoptosis is observed in depression, hippocampal apoptosis as measured by DNA fragmentation from depressed patients appears to play only a minor role in the volume loss (Lucassen et al., 2001).
  • CREB phosphorylation is increased in animals administered rolipram chronically (Nakagawa et al., 2002) and antidepressants that either increase Ca2+/CaM-kinases or cAMP could cause the phosphorylation of CREB in the nucleus (reviewed by D'sa and Duman 2002). They further suggest that the phosphorylated CREB then binds to CRE binding site to promote the expression of BDNF and bcl-2, that appear critical to cell survival and plasticity.
  • neurogenesis is critical for antidepressant activity is it also sufficient and is the mechanism by which the neurogenesis occurs or timing of neurogenesis also critical to the therapeutic activity?
  • Rolipram an antidepressant that works by increasing cAMP levels and is neurogenic in animals (Nakagawa et al., 2002) was effective in our primary in vitro neurogenesis screen. This suggests that our primary in vitro screen would include those agents that might promote neurogenesis by targeting the cAMP/pCREB/BDNF pathway. This does not necessarily exclude all other neurogenesis mechanisms for our NSI compounds. If the target of these neurogenic agents are important for behavioral activity where three separate chemically diverse classes showed in vitro assay efficacy differences and that the mechanism for all does not overlap at the point of CREB phosphorylation and BDNF expression then we might expect very different effects on behavioral activities in depression models.
  • AD therapeutics that regulate neuronal function and survival
  • AIT-082 promotes memory enhancement in AD individuals potentially by stimulating endogenous trophic factors (Ritzman and Glasky, 1999; Rathbone et al., 1999). So the use of agents to promote increased survival and function of the remaining available neurons appears to have some therapeutic value.
  • Hippocampus is one of the main brain regions where neurogenesis in adult brain has been documented across several vertebrate species, including monkeys and humans (e.g., Gould et al., 2001; Eriksson et al., 1998). In fact, adult hippocampal neurogenesis contributes functionally to cognitive capacity. Shors et al. (2001) reported that inhibition of neurogenesis in adult rat hippocampus, in the absence of the destruction of existing neurons, caused impaired memory function. Many studies observed that degenerative conditions induced neurogenesis in mature mammalian brains, suggesting the existence of a natural repair pathway by means of neurogenesis.
  • a number of other inducers of neurogenesis have been identified, including anti-depressants (Malberg et al., 2000; Czeh et al., 2001), and nitric oxide donors (Zhang et al., 2001) suggesting the usefulness of neurogenic agents for other diseases presenting cognitive-deficits, such as stroke and depression.
  • a small molecule that induces hippocampal neurogenesis that is blood brain barrier penetrable would allow for a potentially novel oral therapeutic for Alzheimer's disease.
  • AD therapeutics progressing in clinical trials, target neurodegeneration in the hopes of reducing the neuronal loss and cognitive decline.
  • Apoptotic death involving caspase pathways and DNA fragmentation has been measured in in vitro and animal models of AD and in Alzheimer's diseased brain tissue.
  • the extent of apoptosis leading to neuronal loss is of continual debate with most agreeing it has some effect, but that other neuronal death pathways definitely play a role (see Behl, 2000; Broe et al., 2001; Roth, 2001).
  • Concern that measures of upstream caspase markers in neurons from AD tissue may not proceed to degeneration has been suggested (Raina et al, 2001).
  • VEGF Vascular endothelial growth factor
  • a neurogenic drug is an agent that enhances the process of generating new neurons (neurogenesis).
  • neurogenesis occurs in the adult human brains under normal as well as under degenerative conditions and that such adult-generated neurons do contribute functionally to the brain physiology such as learning and memory.
  • These observations highlight the likelihood that a cellular mechanism for neurogenesis within adult human CNS, especially in hippocampus, does exist both as a normal physiological pathway and as a self-repairing pathway. What is lacking and contributes to permanent damage may be (1) the volume/persistence of neurogenesis and/or (2) the survival/maturation of the new neurons.
  • the objective of the neurogenesis screen as described here is to discover a compound that will significantly boost either of these processes.
  • Many neurological diseases including Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, age-related cognitive decline, stroke, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury and the like are neurodegenerative conditions.
  • Neuropsychiatric diseases including depression, anxiety, schizophrenia and the like also show nerve cell dysfunction leading to cognitive, behavioral, and mood disorders.
  • a neurogenic drug would be beneficial for countering and treating these diseases.
  • the present invention discloses a method of discovering such a neurogenic drug.
  • Such drug will serve to prevent or treat neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders by promoting the birth of new neuron endogenously within the nervous system by administering the compounds of the present invention into the patient. This may involve delivery of the agents alone or together with transplanted stem cells or progenitor cells.
  • FIG. 1 Schematic description of neurogenesis processes captured in the assay and different potential sites of a neurogenic drug action.
  • FIG. 2 Detection of changes in cell number by Alamar Blue dye.
  • Alamar Blue a fluorescent dye, is used as an indicator of metabolic respiration to determine optimum plating density. Results at an initial plating density of 30,000 cells/well suggest a large difference in cell number on removal of mitogen from the N2b media (differentiation) versus N2b with mitogen (proliferation) conditions. This figure only describes total cellular activity, further markers are required to determine what cell types (e.g. neuronal, glial) are observed under differentiating media.
  • FIG. 3A Influence of known growth factors on proliferation and neurogenesis relative to control. Hippocampal progenitor cells were treated for seven days with differentiation media (without mitogen) in the presence or absence of 20 ng/ml of growth factor dosed every other day. Plates were treated with Alamar Blue as described in Methods, then fixed and stained with antibody (TuJ1) against type III beta-tubulin (neuronal marker). The 96-well plate was read in a fluorescent plate reader. Bars represent the Mean+SD from 4 wells per treatment.
  • FIG. 3B LIF effects on hippocampal cell proliferation and neurogenesis by manual cell counting. Hippocampal progenitor cells were treated for seven days with differentiation media (without mitogen) in the presence or absence of 20 ng/ml LIF. Three fields were analyzed per well for total number of cells (DAPI positive nuclei) and for total number of neurons (TUJI positive cells). Bars represent the Mean+SD from 4 wells per treatment. The percentage of neurons calculated for each treatment are as follows: 48.5+6.3% for controls and 53.6+1.15 for LIF. The non-TUJ1 positive cells are mainly astrocytic (GFAP+).
  • GFAP+ astrocytic
  • FIG. 4 Examples of proliferation profile of compounds selected from primary screening. Proliferation was measured after compound treatment for 7 days by Alamar Blue staining of live cells per well. Shown are relative values over the vehicle control.
  • FIG. 5 Example of neurogenesis profile of compounds selected from primary screening. After 7 days of compound treatment, the ratio of neuron number (TuJ1 stained) to the total nuclei number (Hoechst stained) was determined. Shown are the relative ratio of neuron:total cells for each compound over the vehicle control in percentage. Typical ratio for vehicle control is 40-50% neurons. The ratio can change by either increased differentiation of the cells to neurons, decreased proliferation of astrocytes, or increased proliferation of neuronal progenitors.
  • FIG. 6 Examples of neurogenesis profile of compounds selected from primary screening. After 7 days of compound treatment, the cells were stained with TuJ1 for neurons. The absolute number of TuJ1+ neurons per area was quantified and expressed as a relative value to the vehicle treated control.
  • a screening of a large number of unknown agents for discovering a candidate drug involves repeating the same test for several hundreds to several million times. This requires a great deal of reproducibility from the test.
  • a multipotent neural stem/progenitor cell line derived from human hippocampus was used. Cell lines derived from other CNS areas, including dentate gyrus of an adult brain, can also substitute.
  • a neural progenitor population derived as a stable cell line from partial differentiation of embryonic stem cells can also be used. For this purpose, a cell line is defined as a population of cells having been expanded for at least 10 cell-doublings.
  • Cell lines that are genetically engineered to enhance the cells' mitotic capacity can also be used.
  • the genetic modification consists of over-expression of functional c-myc protein intracellularly under a conditional activation system such as c-myc protein fused to a ligand-binding domain of an estrogen receptor.
  • Cell lines that are not genetically engineered are preferred and can also be used.
  • a progenitor population that upon differentiation generates both neurons and glia in a single culture has been used. Presence of glia, either astrocytes and/or oligodendrocytes or their precursors, are required to promote physiological maturation of nascent neurons born from their precursors in culture.
  • differentiation of the progenitors is initiated by withdrawing the mitogen from the culture. Serum as well as other growth-promoting factors should be avoided from the differentiating culture since they will significantly affect the reproducibility and interfere with the neurogenesis assay.
  • Neural stem/progenitor cells differentiate spontaneously in the absence of a mitogen. Undifferentiated mitotic cells are harvested by enzyme treatment to remove residual mitogen, in the preferred embodiment, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). The collected cells are seeded into appropriate plates (standard 96-well or 384-well) pre-coated with the usual extra cellular matrix proteins (poly-D-lysine and fibronectin, for example) for attachment of the cells.
  • the initial seeding density can be within the range of about 2,000-125,000 cells per well of a 96-well plate.
  • the preferred density is 40,000 cells per well of a 96-well plate, which has been optimized for best signal-to-noise ratio.
  • Too low cell density retards the initiation of differentiation and results in poor plating efficiency, which interferes with the assay. Too high cell density leads to inhibition of neurogenesis due to cell-cell contact and paracrine factors, which also interferes with the assay.
  • the actual cell number can be proportionally decreased or increased depending upon the surface area of the culture substrate used. For example, for a 384-well plate, which has approximately 1 ⁇ 4 of the surface area of a 96-well plate, the initial seeding density should be decreased accordingly (1 ⁇ 4).
  • the key activity of a neurogenic drug is to increase the number of neurons generated from their precursors.
  • a molecule can bring about such increase in the neurogenesis by a number of different mechanisms. It can act as a mitogen for the neural stem/progenitor cells and increase the progenitor's cell number, which in turn results in increased number of neurons in the culture when differentiated. Or, it can act as a neuronal specification factor by promoting the stem/progenitor cell differentiation toward neurons in the expense of glia. This will also result in increased number of neurons in the culture, but without changing the overall cell number. Or, it can act as a mitogen for committed neuronal progenitors that differentiate only into neurons. Increasing this subpopulation would also increase the final number of neurons in the culture. Or, it can act as a survival factor to rescue immature neurons from undergoing cell death during differentiation, which will result in increased neurons (FIG. 1).
  • the assay method here captures all of these possibilities by allowing for sufficient time for these processes to unfold.
  • the assay is continued for seven days.
  • a minimum of three days from the onset of differentiation should be allowed for stable expression of definitive neuronal markers to appear.
  • a sufficient time is also required for a compound action on differentiation and/or proliferation to take place to a sufficient degree to be reliably detectable.
  • Manifestation of drug-induced changes in neuron number takes a minimum of three days for the human cells to be detectable.
  • the final neuron number is detected by immunostaining of the culture with antibodies against neurons and quantified by counting of the immunopositive neurons and/or by measuring the staining intensity.
  • the collected cells were seeded at 40,000 cells per well of 96-well plates pre-coated with extracellular matrix proteins (e.g., Biocoat PDL, Fisher).
  • the seeding media is a standard serum-free, growth factor-free, basal media that supports healthy neuronal/glial survival, such as N2 without phenol red.
  • the fluorescence level is proportional to the number of respiring cells in the culture and is a measure of a proliferative activity of a test agent (FIG. 2).
  • LIF leukemia inhibitory factor
  • an agent would be administered to treat a neurodegenerative disease.
  • the neurodegenerative disease would be Alzheimer's disease, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, aged-related cognitive decline, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, demyelination, stroke, spinal injuries, traumatic injuries, neuropathic pain, and the like.
  • this invention would be administered to treat a psychiatric disease.
  • the psychiatric disease is depression, post-traumatic stress syndrome, stress, anxiety, schizophrenia, sleep deprivation, cogntive dysfunction, amnesia, and the like.
  • an agent would be administered by any number of routes and multipotent stem cells or differentiated multipotent stem cells would be transplanted into brain.

Abstract

A method for discovering neurogenic drugs is revealed. The method allows for systematic screening of test agents such as libraries of compounds. The method consists of exposing test agents to cultures of differentiating neural progenitor cells and measuring their effects on increasing the overall cell number and/or the number of neurons.

Description

  • The present patent application claims the benefit of U.S. [0001] Provisional Patent Application 60/432,359, filed Dec. 9, 2002, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application 60/493,674, filed Aug. 8, 2003, which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety and relied upon.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention [0002]
  • According to a long-held doctrine, no significant number of neurons are made and contribute to function in the adult mammalian nervous system. However, recent data indicate that adult mammalian brains contain neural precursor cells capable of generating new neurons both in normal and in injured conditions. These new neurons have been quantified in live animals by injecting or feeding in drinking water a marker of dividing cells, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) and by immunostaining of post-mortem brains with antibodies against BrdU and neuronal markers. An endogenous marker of dividing cells, ki67 protein, has also been used instead of BrdU for this purpose. Thus, in healthy, young rodents, approximately 3,000-15,000 new cells per day are estimated to be born in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, about 60% of which express early neuron-specific proteins such as double-cortin and type III beta-tubulin. Significant number of new cells and new neurons have also been observed in healthy, young primates. In rodents as well as in primates, the location of neurogenic areas in the CNS is limited to the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and the subependymal layer of the striatum. In human patients of different ages who have been diagnosed with a tumor of the tongue, a single injection of BrdU has revealed significant number of new cells and new neurons being born in the dentate gyrus and the subependymal layer of the striatum. Thus, the process of generating new neurons (neurogenesis) occurs in the mature, adult brain in significant quantities throughout rodents, primates, and human species. [0003]
  • Such significant quantities of new neurons suggest that they may be important for the normal physiology of the brain, especially the hippocampus. Hippocampus is the well-known center of learning, memory, and other cognitive functions, processes which new information are added, edited, stored, and recalled constantly throughout life. Since hippocampus is also the most potent neurogenic area of the brain, many studies have been undertaken to establish whether neurogenesis may be the cellular mechanism to structurally accommodate the ever-increasing volume of cognitive processing to be handled. Thus, it has been shown that at least some of the newly born neurons, marked by genetic markers, do mature to be electrophysiologically active and integrate into the existing neuronal circuitry of the hippocampus. Ablation of the neurogenesis in rats leads to decreased cognitive capabilities in several behavior tests. Thus, the existing data demonstrate that neurogenesis significantly contributes to the normal hippocampal physiology. [0004]
  • In abnormal conditions, such as when an injury to a brain area has occurred, neurogenesis becomes more wide-spread and perhaps functionally diverse. In rodent models of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, the newly born neurons of the subependyma (also referred to as subventricular zone) are seen migrating to and accumulating in the lesion area of the cortex. However, the newly born neurons have short survival period. [0005]
  • Thus, a compound that can stimulate the endogenous neurogenesis either in a disease state or in a healthy state may be an effective drug for a number of human nervous system diseases. However, the current limitation is the lack of an effective, predictive in vitro assay that can be used to select a neurogenic compound for clinical drug development. Disclosed here is a novel, in vitro assay, which is effective and predictive, to be useful for discovering a compound that promotes neurogenesis in vivo. Also disclosed are classes of compound structures that are shown to be particularly effective in promoting the neurogenesis. [0006]
  • This invention relates to the method of discovering a neurogenic drug to treat neurologic, psychiatric, and aging-related disorders. It also relates to the use of Fused Imidazoles, Aminopyrimidines, Nicotinamides, Aminomethyl Phenoxypiperidines and Aryloxypiperidines for use as therapeutic agents and analytical reagents by means of promoting neurogenesis. More particularly this invention relates to these agents as therapeutics for prevention and treatment of neurological diseases in mammals and reagents for detecting neurogenesis and proliferation. [0007]
  • 2. Description of the Related Art [0008]
  • Most antidepressants are thought to work by increasing the levels of monoamines available for post-synaptic receptors. Examples of classes of agents working apparently by the “monoaminergic hypothesis of depression” include the selective serotonin uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) like fluoxetine, the mixed noradrenaline/serotonin transporter blockers like tricyclic agent imipramine and noradrenaline uptake inhibitors like desipramine. The antidepressant-induced increase in intraneuronal biogenic amines occurs quite rapidly. However, the antidepressant-induced improvement in clinical behavior requires weeks of daily administration. [0009]
  • One hypothesis that may account for the slow-onset of the antidepressants' therapeutic activity is that they work by promoting hippocampal neurogenesis. It is expected that neurogenesis would require a number of weeks for stem cells to divide, differentiate, migrate and establish connections with post-synaptic neurons. The neurogenesis theory of depression then postulates that antidepressant effect is brought about by structural changes in the hippocampal circuitry contributed by newly generated neurons stimulated by antidepressants (Malberg et al., 2000; Czeh et al, 2001; Santarelli et al, 2003). [0010]
  • The neurogenic theory of depression, though not conclusive, has strong supportive data including the finding that neurogenesis is actually requisite for antidepressant behavioral improvement in the novelty suppressed feeding model (Santarelli et al., 2003). A therapeutic benefit from hippocampal neurogenesis is further supported by the finding of hippocampal atrophy in depression, where MRI imaging studies identified a reduction in the right and the left hippocampal volumes in individuals with major depression (Sheline et al., 1996; Bremner et al., 2000; Mervaala et al., 2000). Long standing works also suggest a strong relationship between glucocorticoid dysregulation or glucocorticoid hypersecretion in stress and depression, such that the hippocampal volume loss might be considered a consequence of glucocorticoid-induced hippocampal neuronal loss (Sheline et al., 1996; Lucassen et al., 2001; Lee et al., 2002 (review)). Furthermore, in studies which involved the administration of a chronic stress to animals, both hippocampal volume changes and reduction in neurogenesis were observed, and these events were both reversed by chronic antidepressant administration (Czeh et al., 2001; Pham et al., 2003), further illustrating the strong association between depression, stress and neurogenesis. The association comes full circle, since agents or conditions that promote a reduction in neurogenesis also appear as causative agents/events in depression, specifically glucocorticoid (Sapolsky, 2000), and depletion of serotonin (Brezun and Daszuta, 1999). Kempermann and Kronenberg (2003), though acknowledging the validity of the hippocampal neurogenesis theory of depression, suggest that this hypothesis needs to be looked at in the context of a larger model of cellular plasticity, which elucidates how antidepressants induce nascent neurons of unknown phenotype to survive and produce viable circuits. [0011]
  • Neurogenesis can be characterized as three successive stages: proliferation of endogenous stem cells and precursors, differentiation into neurons and neuron maturation with formation of viable synaptic connections (plasticity). By taking into account all stages of neurogenesis, then the hippocampal volume loss in depression could potentially be caused by 1) inhibition of the endogenous hippocampal stem cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus, 2) inhibition of differentiation and dendrite development and 3) by loss of neurons (apoptosis) and their dendritic structure. Though apoptosis is observed in depression, hippocampal apoptosis as measured by DNA fragmentation from depressed patients appears to play only a minor role in the volume loss (Lucassen et al., 2001). In an animal model of acute stress or in normal animals receiving exogenous corticosterone the stress did cause a reduction in synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus (Xu et al., 1998). Chronic administration of the tricyclic antidepressant, imipramine partially reversed the loss in LTP in socially stressed, depressive-like animals (Von Frijtag et al., 2001) suggesting imipramine effects on the plasticity phase of neurogenesis. In another animal model of depression, presenting neurogenesis loss and hippocampal volume loss, stressed animals that chronically received the antidepressant, tianeptine, showed similar numbers of dividing cells as control animals (no social stress) a measure of proliferation (Czeh et al., 2001). In an experiment looking at association of antidepressants and neurogenesis in normal adult rats, the antidepressant, fluoxetine required chronic administration to cause proliferation of cells in dentate gyrus (24 hrs post treatment), but there was considerable loss of nascent cells whether in the presence or absence of fluoxetine treatment, where fluoxetine provided no observed differentiation or survival benefit (Malberg et al., 2000). Results on different neurogenic intervention points by known antidepressants suggest that novel neurogenic agents that intervene at different points in the neurogenesis pathway, could result in potentially diverse therapeutic effects on depression. [0012]
  • These points of intervention can be studied and the target elucidated for novel antidepressant candidates through in vitro assays. Since adult stem cell proliferation and neurogenesis is observed in adult vertebrates in hippocampal dentate gyrus (Gould et al., 2001; Eriksson et al., 1998), we can use multi-potential hippocampal stem cells to screen agents in vitro for neurogenic activity. [0013]
  • Interestingly, chronic administration of either the antidepressant fluoxetine, an SSRI or the antidepressant rolipram, a phosphodiesterase IV inhibitor, promoted neurogenesis in normal animals (Malberg et al., 2000; Nakagawa et al., 2002). One might conclude from these results that any agent that promotes neurogenesis will generate a behavioral benefit in depression, unrelated to the agents mechanism-of-action or possibly there is a common pathway where both drug actions overlap. D'Sa and Duman (2002) suggest a scheme whereby the phosphorylation and activation of CREB and the subsequent expression of BDNF are central to the induction of neurogenesis, that culminates in antidepressant behavior. CREB phosphorylation is increased in animals administered rolipram chronically (Nakagawa et al., 2002) and antidepressants that either increase Ca2+/CaM-kinases or cAMP could cause the phosphorylation of CREB in the nucleus (reviewed by D'sa and Duman 2002). They further suggest that the phosphorylated CREB then binds to CRE binding site to promote the expression of BDNF and bcl-2, that appear critical to cell survival and plasticity. Proof of neurotrophic factor BDNF's involvement in depression comes from studies showing that antidepressants and electroconvulsive shock both caused an increase in BDNF levels (Nibuya et al., 1996) and that intrahippocampal injection of BDNF had antidepressant activity in two models of depression (Shirayama et al., 2002). [0014]
  • If neurogenesis is critical for antidepressant activity is it also sufficient and is the mechanism by which the neurogenesis occurs or timing of neurogenesis also critical to the therapeutic activity? We can try to answer these questions using novel agents developed through screening paradigms that identify agents that promote the proliferation and differentiation of endogenous hippocampal stem cells to neurons in vivo if they will be effective antidepressants. Since we have completed the screening of 10,000 small molecule compounds in in vitro models of neurogenesis and shown that our in vitro screen is predictive of in vivo neurogenic efficacy, we can then test these orally available agents, that promote in vivo neurogenesis, in models of depression. Rolipram, an antidepressant that works by increasing cAMP levels and is neurogenic in animals (Nakagawa et al., 2002) was effective in our primary in vitro neurogenesis screen. This suggests that our primary in vitro screen would include those agents that might promote neurogenesis by targeting the cAMP/pCREB/BDNF pathway. This does not necessarily exclude all other neurogenesis mechanisms for our NSI compounds. If the target of these neurogenic agents are important for behavioral activity where three separate chemically diverse classes showed in vitro assay efficacy differences and that the mechanism for all does not overlap at the point of CREB phosphorylation and BDNF expression then we might expect very different effects on behavioral activities in depression models. [0015]
  • Neuropathology associated with key cognitive regions of the Alzheimer's diseased brain have led to therapeutic strategies that address the neuronal loss, in the hopes of reducing the cognitive decline. One strategy enlists trophic agents, that regulate neuronal function and survival, as AD therapeutics (see Peterson and Gage, 1999). Problems with systemic administration, side effects and locating trophic-sensitive neurons generated few clinical successes with these therapies. One AD therapeutic, AIT-082, promotes memory enhancement in AD individuals potentially by stimulating endogenous trophic factors (Ritzman and Glasky, 1999; Rathbone et al., 1999). So the use of agents to promote increased survival and function of the remaining available neurons appears to have some therapeutic value. [0016]
  • Hippocampus is one of the main brain regions where neurogenesis in adult brain has been documented across several vertebrate species, including monkeys and humans (e.g., Gould et al., 2001; Eriksson et al., 1998). In fact, adult hippocampal neurogenesis contributes functionally to cognitive capacity. Shors et al. (2001) reported that inhibition of neurogenesis in adult rat hippocampus, in the absence of the destruction of existing neurons, caused impaired memory function. Many studies observed that degenerative conditions induced neurogenesis in mature mammalian brains, suggesting the existence of a natural repair pathway by means of neurogenesis. A focal ischemic model, reversible photothrombic ring stroke, caused increased neurogenesis in rat cortex by 3-6% (Gu et al., 2000). Seizures induced by electroconvulsive shock in adult rats increased neurogenesis in dentate gyrus of hippocampus (Scott et al, 2000; Madsen et al, 2000). Also, rats gamma-irradiated to kill mitotic cells in the CNS showed reduced numbers of nascent neurons and reduced LTP in slice cultures. These observations highlight the likelihood that a cellular mechanism for neurogenesis within adult human CNS, especially in hippocampus, does exist both as a normal physiological process and as a self-repairing pathway. [0017]
  • In adult neurogenesis a decline due to aging is observed (Kuhn et al., 1996), though proof that this age-dependent decline in neurogenesis causes cognitive impairment is still debated. Considerable evidence does exist, indicating that increased neurogenesis reduces age-associated cognitive decline. This is most dramatically observed with the transplantation of human stem cells into aged rats initiating improved water maze learning and retention (Qu et al., 2001). Other data suggests that induction of neurogenesis by diet restriction (Lee et al., 2000) exercise (van Praag et al., 1999) or growth factor addition (Lichtenwalner et al., 2001) improves learning and memory in adult or aged rats. A number of other inducers of neurogenesis have been identified, including anti-depressants (Malberg et al., 2000; Czeh et al., 2001), and nitric oxide donors (Zhang et al., 2001) suggesting the usefulness of neurogenic agents for other diseases presenting cognitive-deficits, such as stroke and depression. A small molecule that induces hippocampal neurogenesis that is blood brain barrier penetrable would allow for a potentially novel oral therapeutic for Alzheimer's disease. [0018]
  • Other potential AD therapeutics progressing in clinical trials, target neurodegeneration in the hopes of reducing the neuronal loss and cognitive decline. Apoptotic death involving caspase pathways and DNA fragmentation has been measured in in vitro and animal models of AD and in Alzheimer's diseased brain tissue. The extent of apoptosis leading to neuronal loss is of continual debate with most agreeing it has some effect, but that other neuronal death pathways definitely play a role (see Behl, 2000; Broe et al., 2001; Roth, 2001). Concern that measures of upstream caspase markers in neurons from AD tissue may not proceed to degeneration has been suggested (Raina et al, 2001). In order to screen for a neuroprotectant therapeutics it is critical, therefore, to measure more than one endpoint of neuronal death and determine at what point an agent may intervene in the death pathway(s). Behl (2000) suggested that AD pathology is most likely a mixture of apoptotic and necrotic pathways and that concentrating therapeutic discovery using only one pathway may provide inconclusive results. All hits in our neurogenesis models were tested through our secondary apoptosis/necrosis assay to screen for agents that function both as neurogenic and neuroprotective agents. These agents may improve or reverse the cognitive decline observed in MCI and AD. [0019]
  • RELATED ART
  • Arsenijevic Y, Villemure J G, Brunet J F, Bloch J J, Deglon N, Kostic C, Zurn A, Aebischer P. (2001). Isolation of multipotent neural precursors residing in the cortex of the adult human brain. Exp Neurol. vol 170(1):48-62. [0020]
  • Behl C. Apoptosis and Alzheimer's disease. (2000) J Neural Transm. Vol. 107 (11):1325-44. [0021]
  • Bremner, J. D., Narayan, M., Anderson, E. R., Staib, L. H., Miller, H. L. Charney, D. S. (2000). Hippocampal volume reduction in major depression. Am. J. Psychiatry vol 157(1):115-118. [0022]
  • Brezun, J M and Daszuta, A. (1999). Depletion in serotonin decreases neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus and the subventricular zone of adult rats. Neuroscience vol 89(4):999-1002. [0023]
  • Broe, M, Shepherd, C E, Milward, E A, and Halliday, G M. (2001) Relationship between DNA fragmentation, morphological changes and neuronal loss in Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies. Acta Neuropathol. (Berl) Vol. 101(6):616-624. [0024]
  • Calof A L, Chikaraishi D M. (1989). Analysis of neurogenesis in a mammalian neuroepithelium: proliferation and differentiation of an olfactory neuron precursor in vitro. Neuron. 3(1):115-27. [0025]
  • Cameron H A, Hazel T G, McKay R D. (1998). Regulation of neurogenesis by growth factors and neurotransmitters. J Neurobiol. vol 36(2):287-306. [0026]
  • Coon H G, Curcio F, Sakaguchi K, Brandi M L, Swerdlow R D. (1989). Cell cultures of neuroblasts from rat olfactory epithelium that show odorant responses. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. vol 86(5):1703-7. [0027]
  • Coppell, A. L., Pei, Q., Zetterstrom, T. S. (2003) Bi-phasic change in BDNF gene expression following antidepressant drug treatment. Neuropharmcaology vol 44(7) :903-910. [0028]
  • Czeh, B., Michaelis, T., Watanabe, T., Frahm, J., de Biurrun, G., van Kampen, M., Bartolomucci, A., and Fuchs E. (2001). Stress-induced changes in cerebral metabolites, hippocampal volume, and cell proliferation are prevented by antidepressant treatment with tianepine. PNAS Vol. 98 (22): 12796-12801. [0029]
  • D'Sa, C., and Duman, D. C. (2002). Antidepressants and neuroplasticity. Bipolar Disorders vol 4:183-194. [0030]
  • Eriksson P S, Perfilieva E, Bjork-Eriksson T, Alborn A M, Nordborg C, Peterson D A, Gage F H. (1998). Neurogenesis in the adult human hippocampus. Nat Med. vol 4 (11):1313-7. [0031]
  • Falk A, Frisen J. (2002). Amphiregulin is a mitogen for adult neural stem cells. J Neurosci Res. vol 69(6):757-62. [0032]
  • Feron F, Mackay-Sim A, Andrieu J L, Matthaei K I, Holley A, Sicard G. (1999) Stress induces neurogenesis in non-neuronal cell cultures of adult olfactory epithelium. Neuroscience. vol 88(2):571-83. [0033]
  • Goldman S A, Zaremba A, Niedzwiecki D. (1992). In vitro neurogenesis by neuronal precursor cells derived from the adult songbird brain. J Neurosci. 12(7):2532-41. [0034]
  • Gould E, Vail N, Wagers M, Gross C G. (2001) Inaugural Article: Adult-generated hippocampal and neocortical neurons in macaques have a transient existence. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. vol 98(19):10910-10917. [0035]
  • Gu W, Brannstrom T, Wester P. (2000) Cortical neurogenesis in adult rats after reversible photothrombotic stroke. J Cereb Blood Flow Metab Vol. 20(8):1166-1173. [0036]
  • Hauser K F, Houdi A A, Turbek C S, Elde R P, Maxson W 3rd. (2000). Opioids intrinsically inhibit the genesis of mouse cerebellar granule neuron precursors in vitro: differential impact of mu and delta receptor activation on proliferation and neurite elongation. Eur J Neurosci. vol 12(4):1281-93. [0037]
  • Jelitai M, Schlett K, Varju P, Eisel U, Madarasz E. (2002) Regulated appearance of NMDA receptor subunits and channel functions during in vitro neuronal differentiation. J Neurobiol. vol 51(1):54-65. [0038]
  • Jin K, Mao X O, Sun Y, Xie L, Greenberg D A. (2002). Stem cell factor stimulates neurogenesis in vitro and in vivo. J Clin Invest. vol 110(3):311-9. [0039]
  • Jin K, Zhu Y, Sun Y, Mao X O, Xie L, Greenberg D A. (2002). Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) stimulates neurogenesis in vitro and in vivo. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. vol 99(18):11946-50. [0040]
  • Kehl L J, Fairbanks C A, Laughlin T M, Wilcox G L. (1997). Neurogenesis in postnatal rat spinal cord: a study in primary culture. Science. vol 276(5312):586-9. [0041]
  • Kempermann, G. and Kronenberg, G. (2003) Depressed new neurons-adult hippocampal neurogenesis and a cellular plasticity hypothesis of major depression. Biol Psychiatry vol 54 (5):499-503. [0042]
  • Kempermann, G. and Gage, F H (2002). Genetic determinants of adult hippocampal neurogenesis correlate with acquisition, but not probe trial performance, in the water maze task. Eur J of Neurosci, 16, 129-36. [0043]
  • Kuhn, H. G., Dickenson-Anson, H. and Gage, F. H. (1996) Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus of the adult rat: age-related decrease of neuronal progeneitor proliferation. J. Neurosci. vol 16 (6), pp2027-33. [0044]
  • Lee, A. L., Ogle, W. O., Sapolsky, R. M. (2002). Stress and depression: possible links to neurons death in the hippocampus. Bipolar Disord. vol 4(2):117-128. [0045]
  • Lee, J., Duan, W., Long, J. M., Ingram, D. K., and Mattson, M. P. (2000) Dietary restriction increases the number of newly generated neural cells, and induces BDNF expression, in the dentate gyrus of rats. J. Mol. Neurosci. vol.15 (2), pp 99-108. [0046]
  • Lichtenwalner, R. J., Forbes, M. E., Bennett, S. A., Lynch, C. D., Sonntag, W. E., and Riddle, D. R. (2001) Intracerebroventricular infusion of insulin-like growth factor-1 ameliorates the age-related decline in hippocampal neurogenesis. Neuroscience vol. 107 (4), pp603-613. [0047]
  • Lucassen, P. J., Muller, M. B., Holsboer, F., Bauer, J., Holtrop, A., Wouda, J., Hoogendijk, W. J., DeKloet, E. R., Swaab, D. R. (2001). Hippocampal apoptosis in major depression is a minor event and absent from subareas at risk for glucocorticoid overexposure. Am. J. Pathol. vol 158(2):453-468. [0048]
  • Ma W, Maric D, Li B S, Hu Q, Andreadis J D, Grant G M, Liu Q Y, Shaffer K M, Chang Y H, Zhang L, Pancrazio J J, Pant H C, Stenger D A, Barker J L. (2000). Acetylcholine stimulates cortical precursor cell proliferation in vitro via muscarinic receptor activation and MAP kinase phosphorylation. Eur J Neurosci. vol 12(4):1227-40. [0049]
  • Madsen T M, Treschow A, Bengzon J, Bolwig T G, Lindvall O, Tingstrom A. (2000) Increased neurogenesis in a model of electroconvulsive therapy. Biol Psychiatry Vol. 47(12):1043-1049. [0050]
  • Malberg, J. E., Eisch, A. J., Nestler, E. J., and Duman, R. S. (2000). Chronic antidepressant treatment increases neurogenesis in adult rat hippocampus. J. Neurosci. vol. 20 (24):9104-9110. [0051]
  • Marin N, Romero B., Bosch-Morell F., Llansola M., Felipo V., Roma J., and Romero F. J. (2000) □-amyloid-induced activation of caspase-3 in primary cultures of rat neurons. Mech. Ageing and Devl. Vol. 119:63-67. [0052]
  • Mayo W, LeMoal M, Abrous D N. (2001) Pregnenolone sulfate and aging of cognitive functions: behavioral, neurochemical, and morphological investigations. Horm Behav Vol. vol 40(2):215-217. [0053]
  • Mervaala, E., Fohr, J., Kononen, M., Valkonen-Korhonen, M., Vainio, P., Partanen, K., Partanen, J., Tiihonen, J., Viinamaki, H., Karjalainen, A. K., Lehtonen, J. (2000). Quantitative MRI of the hippocampus and amygdala in severe depression. Psychol. Med. vol 30(1):117-125. [0054]
  • Murrell W, Bushell G R, Livesey J, McGrath J, MacDonald K P, Bates P R, Mackay-Sim A. (1996). Neurogenesis in adult human. Neuroreport vol 26;7(6):1189-94. [0055]
  • Nakagawa, S., Kim, J-E, Le R., Malberg, J. E., Chen, J., Steffen, C., Zhang, Y-J., Nestler, E. J., Duman, R. S. (2002). regulation of neurogenesis in adult mouse hippocampus by cAMP and the cAMP reponse element-binding protein. J. Neurosci. vol 22(9):3673-3682. [0056]
  • Nibuya,, M., Nestker, E, J., Duman, R. S. (1996). Chronic antidepressant administration increases the expression of cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) in rat hippocampus. Neurosci. Lett. vol 267:81-84. [0057]
  • Nestler, E. J., Barrot, M., DiLeone, R. J., Eisch, A., Gold, S. J., and Monteggia, L. M. (2002). Neurobiology of Depression. Neuron, vol 34:13-25. [0058]
  • Palmer T D, Markakis E A, Willhoite A R, Safar F, Gage F H. (1999) Fibroblast growth factor-2 activates a latent neurogenic program in neural stem cells from diverse regions of the adult CNS. J Neurosci. vol 19(19):8487-97. [0059]
  • Peterson D. A. and Gage F. H. (1999) Trophic factor therapy for neuronal death. In: Alzheimer Disease, Terry, Katzman, Bick, [0060] Sisodia eds 2nd edition.
  • Pham, K., Nacher, J., Hof, P R., McEwen, B. S. (2003). Repeated restraint stress suppresses neurogenesis and induces biphasic PSA-NCAM expression in the adult dentate gyrus. Eur. J. Neurosci. vol 17(2):879-886. [0061]
  • Pincus D W, Harrison-Restelli C, Barry J, Goodman R R, Fraser R A, Nedergaard M, Goldman S A. (1997). In vitro neurogenesis by adult human epileptic temporal neocortex. Clin Neurosurg. vol 44:17-25. [0062]
  • Qu, T, Brannan, C. L., Kim, H. M., and Sugaya, K. (2001) Human neural stem cells improve cognitive function of aged brain. Neuroreport vol. 12 (6), pp. 1127-32. [0063]
  • Raina, A K, Hochman A., Zhu, X., Rottkamp, C. A., Nunomura, A., Siedlak, S. L., Boux, H., Castellani, R. J., Perry, G., Smith, M. A. (2001) Abortive apoptosis in Alzheimer's disease. Acta Neuropahtol (Berl) Vol. 101(4):305-310. [0064]
  • Rathbone M P, Middlemiss P J, Gysbers J W, Andrew C, Herman M A, Reed J K, Ciccarelli R, Di Iorio P, and Caciagli F. (1999) Trophic effects of purines in neurons and glial cells. Prog. Neurobiol. Vol. 59(6):663-90. [0065]
  • Ritzman R, Glasky A J. (1997) Psychopharmacological actions of AIT-082. Soc. Neurosci. Abs. Vol. 23:1896. [0066]
  • Rozental R, Mehler M F, Morales M, Andrade-Rozental A F, Kessler J A, Spray D C. (1995). Differentiation of hippocampal progenitor cells in vitro: temporal expression of intercellular coupling and voltage- and ligand-gated responses. Dev Biol. 167(1):350-62. [0067]
  • Roth, K. A. (2001) Caspases, apoptosis, and Alzheimer disease: causation, correlation, and confusion. J. Neuropathol. Exp. Neurol. Vol. 60(9):829-838. [0068]
  • Roy N S, Wang S, Jiang L, Kang J, Benraiss A, Harrison-Restelli C, Fraser R A, Couldwell W T, Kawaguchi A, Okano H, Nedergaard M, Goldman S A. (2000) In vitro neurogenesis by progenitor cells isolated from the adult human hippocampus. Nat Med. vol 6(3):271-7. [0069]
  • Santarelli, L., Saxe, M., Gross, C., Surget, A., Battaglia, F., Dulawa, S., Weisstaub, N., Lee, J., Duman, R., Arancio, O., Belzung, C., and Hen, R. (2003). Requirement of hippocampal neurogenesis for the behavioral effects of antidepressants. Science vol 301:805-809. [0070]
  • Sapolsky, R. M. (2000). The possibility of neurotoxicity in the hippocampus in major depression: a primer on neuron death. Biol. Psychiatry vol 48(8):775-765. [0071]
  • Satoh M, Yoshida T. (1997). Promotion of neurogenesis in mouse olfactory neuronal progenitor cells by leukemia inhibitory factor in vitro. Neurosci Lett. vol 225(3):165-8. [0072]
  • Scott B W, Wojtowicz J M, Burnham W M. (2000) Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus of the rat following electroconvulsive shock seizures. Exp Neurol Vol. 165(2):231-236. [0073]
  • Seaberg R M, van der Kooy. (2002) Adult rodent neurogenic regions: the ventricular subependyma contains neural stem cells, but the dentate gyrus contains restricted progenitors. J Neurosci. vol 22(5):1784-93. [0074]
  • Sheline, Y. I., Wang, P. W., Gado, M. H., Csernansky, J. G., Vannier, M. W. (1996). Hippocampal atrophy in recurrent major depression. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA vol 93:3908-3913. [0075]
  • Shingo T, Sorokan S T, Shimazaki T, Weiss S. (2001). Erythropoietin regulates the in vitro and in vivo production of neuronal progenitors by mammalian forebrain neural stem cells. J Neurosci. vol 21(24):9733-43. [0076]
  • Shirayama, Y., Chen, A. C.-H., Nakagawa, S., Russell, D. S., Duman, R. S. (2002). Brain-derived neurotrophic factor produces antidepressant effects in behavioral models of depression. J. Neurosci. vol 22(8):3251-3261. [0077]
  • Shors T J, Miesegaes G, Beylin A, Zhao M, Rydel T, Gould E. (2001) Neurogenesis in the adult is involved in the formation of trace memories. Nature vol 410(6826):372-376. Shou J, Rim P C, Calof A L. (1999). BMPs inhibit neurogenesis by a mechanism involving degradation of a transcription factor. Nat Neurosci. 2(4):301-3. [0078]
  • Takahashi J, Palmer T D, Gage F H. (1999). Retinoic acid and neurotrophins collaborate to regulate neurogenesis in adult-derived neural stem cell cultures. J Neurobiol. vol 38(1):65-81. [0079]
  • Taupin P, Ray J, Fischer W H, Suhr S T, Hakansson K, Grubb A, Gage F H. (2000). FGF-2-responsive neural stem cell proliferation requires CCg, a novel autocrine/paracrine cofactor. Neuron. vol 28(2):385-97. [0080]
  • Von Frijtag, J. C., Kamal, A., Reijmers, L. G., Schrama, L. H., van den Bos, R., Spruijt, B. M. (2001). Chronic imipramine treatment partially reverses the lnog-term changes of hipocampal synaptic plasticity in socially stressed rats. Neurosci. Lett. vol 309(3):153-156. [0081]
  • Wohl C A, Weiss S. (1998). Retinoic acid enhances neuronal proliferation and astroglial differentiation in cultures of CNS stem cell-derived precursors. J Neurobiol. vol 5;37(2):281-90. [0082]
  • Xu, L., Holscher, C., Anwyl, R., Rowan, M. J. (1998). Glucocorticoid receptor and protein/RNA synthesis-dependent mechanisms underlie the control of synaptic plasticity by stress. PNAS USA. vol 95:3204-3208. [0083]
  • Zhang, R., Zhang, L., Zhang, Z., Wang, Y., Lu, M., Lapointe, M., and Chopp, M. (2001) A nitric oxide donor induces neurogenesis and reduces functional deficits after stroke in rats. Ann. Neurol. vol. 50 (5), pp 602-11. [0084]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • A neurogenic drug is an agent that enhances the process of generating new neurons (neurogenesis). Recent studies indicate that neurogenesis occurs in the adult human brains under normal as well as under degenerative conditions and that such adult-generated neurons do contribute functionally to the brain physiology such as learning and memory. These observations highlight the likelihood that a cellular mechanism for neurogenesis within adult human CNS, especially in hippocampus, does exist both as a normal physiological pathway and as a self-repairing pathway. What is lacking and contributes to permanent damage may be (1) the volume/persistence of neurogenesis and/or (2) the survival/maturation of the new neurons. The objective of the neurogenesis screen as described here is to discover a compound that will significantly boost either of these processes. [0085]
  • Many neurological diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, age-related cognitive decline, stroke, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury and the like are neurodegenerative conditions. Neuropsychiatric diseases including depression, anxiety, schizophrenia and the like also show nerve cell dysfunction leading to cognitive, behavioral, and mood disorders. A neurogenic drug would be beneficial for countering and treating these diseases. [0086]
  • The present invention discloses a method of discovering such a neurogenic drug. Such drug will serve to prevent or treat neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders by promoting the birth of new neuron endogenously within the nervous system by administering the compounds of the present invention into the patient. This may involve delivery of the agents alone or together with transplanted stem cells or progenitor cells. [0087]
  • Using the method herein, compounds of the type, Fused Imidazoles, Aminopyrimidines, Nicotinamides, Aminomethyl Phenoxypiperidines and Aryloxypiperidines are evaluated for their ability to promote neurogenesis by proliferation/differentiation of human hippocampal multipotent stem/progenitor cells and neuronal progenitors.[0088]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1. Schematic description of neurogenesis processes captured in the assay and different potential sites of a neurogenic drug action. [0089]
  • FIG. 2. Detection of changes in cell number by Alamar Blue dye. Alamar Blue, a fluorescent dye, is used as an indicator of metabolic respiration to determine optimum plating density. Results at an initial plating density of 30,000 cells/well suggest a large difference in cell number on removal of mitogen from the N2b media (differentiation) versus N2b with mitogen (proliferation) conditions. This figure only describes total cellular activity, further markers are required to determine what cell types (e.g. neuronal, glial) are observed under differentiating media. [0090]
  • FIG. 3A. Influence of known growth factors on proliferation and neurogenesis relative to control. Hippocampal progenitor cells were treated for seven days with differentiation media (without mitogen) in the presence or absence of 20 ng/ml of growth factor dosed every other day. Plates were treated with Alamar Blue as described in Methods, then fixed and stained with antibody (TuJ1) against type III beta-tubulin (neuronal marker). The 96-well plate was read in a fluorescent plate reader. Bars represent the Mean+SD from 4 wells per treatment. [0091]
  • FIG. 3B. LIF effects on hippocampal cell proliferation and neurogenesis by manual cell counting. Hippocampal progenitor cells were treated for seven days with differentiation media (without mitogen) in the presence or absence of 20 ng/ml LIF. Three fields were analyzed per well for total number of cells (DAPI positive nuclei) and for total number of neurons (TUJI positive cells). Bars represent the Mean+SD from 4 wells per treatment. The percentage of neurons calculated for each treatment are as follows: 48.5+6.3% for controls and 53.6+1.15 for LIF. The non-TUJ1 positive cells are mainly astrocytic (GFAP+). [0092]
  • FIG. 4. Examples of proliferation profile of compounds selected from primary screening. Proliferation was measured after compound treatment for 7 days by Alamar Blue staining of live cells per well. Shown are relative values over the vehicle control. [0093]
  • FIG. 5. Example of neurogenesis profile of compounds selected from primary screening. After 7 days of compound treatment, the ratio of neuron number (TuJ1 stained) to the total nuclei number (Hoechst stained) was determined. Shown are the relative ratio of neuron:total cells for each compound over the vehicle control in percentage. Typical ratio for vehicle control is 40-50% neurons. The ratio can change by either increased differentiation of the cells to neurons, decreased proliferation of astrocytes, or increased proliferation of neuronal progenitors. [0094]
  • FIG. 6. Examples of neurogenesis profile of compounds selected from primary screening. After 7 days of compound treatment, the cells were stained with TuJ1 for neurons. The absolute number of TuJ1+ neurons per area was quantified and expressed as a relative value to the vehicle treated control. [0095]
  • FIG. 7. Dose-dependent increase in neuron number. Differentiating human hippocampal progenitor cells were treated for 7 days with varying concentrations of “primary hits”. Subsequently, the cells were fixed, stained with TuJ1, and positive cells were quantified by an automated cell counter. Shown are the number of neurons after each treatment normalized against the vehicle control (0 microM=1.0).[0096]
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 1. A Stable Cell Line of Neural Progenitors
  • A screening of a large number of unknown agents (e.g., protein factors, peptides, nucleic acids, natural compounds, or synthetic compounds) for discovering a candidate drug involves repeating the same test for several hundreds to several million times. This requires a great deal of reproducibility from the test. In order to obtain such reproducibility for neurogenesis assay, we have created stable cell lines of neural progenitors, which upon differentiation generate reproducible quantities of neurons. In a preferred embodiment, a multipotent neural stem/progenitor cell line derived from human hippocampus was used. Cell lines derived from other CNS areas, including dentate gyrus of an adult brain, can also substitute. A neural progenitor population derived as a stable cell line from partial differentiation of embryonic stem cells can also be used. For this purpose, a cell line is defined as a population of cells having been expanded for at least 10 cell-doublings. [0097]
  • Cell lines that are genetically engineered to enhance the cells' mitotic capacity can also be used. In a preferred embodiment, the genetic modification consists of over-expression of functional c-myc protein intracellularly under a conditional activation system such as c-myc protein fused to a ligand-binding domain of an estrogen receptor. Cell lines that are not genetically engineered are preferred and can also be used. [0098]
  • In a preferred embodiment, a progenitor population that upon differentiation generates both neurons and glia in a single culture has been used. Presence of glia, either astrocytes and/or oligodendrocytes or their precursors, are required to promote physiological maturation of nascent neurons born from their precursors in culture. [0099]
  • In a preferred embodiment, differentiation of the progenitors is initiated by withdrawing the mitogen from the culture. Serum as well as other growth-promoting factors should be avoided from the differentiating culture since they will significantly affect the reproducibility and interfere with the neurogenesis assay. [0100]
  • 2. Preparation of Assay Plate
  • Neural stem/progenitor cells differentiate spontaneously in the absence of a mitogen. Undifferentiated mitotic cells are harvested by enzyme treatment to remove residual mitogen, in the preferred embodiment, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). The collected cells are seeded into appropriate plates (standard 96-well or 384-well) pre-coated with the usual extra cellular matrix proteins (poly-D-lysine and fibronectin, for example) for attachment of the cells. The initial seeding density can be within the range of about 2,000-125,000 cells per well of a 96-well plate. The preferred density is 40,000 cells per well of a 96-well plate, which has been optimized for best signal-to-noise ratio. Too low cell density retards the initiation of differentiation and results in poor plating efficiency, which interferes with the assay. Too high cell density leads to inhibition of neurogenesis due to cell-cell contact and paracrine factors, which also interferes with the assay. The actual cell number can be proportionally decreased or increased depending upon the surface area of the culture substrate used. For example, for a 384-well plate, which has approximately ¼ of the surface area of a 96-well plate, the initial seeding density should be decreased accordingly (¼). [0101]
  • 3. Detection of Neurogenesis
  • The key activity of a neurogenic drug is to increase the number of neurons generated from their precursors. A molecule can bring about such increase in the neurogenesis by a number of different mechanisms. It can act as a mitogen for the neural stem/progenitor cells and increase the progenitor's cell number, which in turn results in increased number of neurons in the culture when differentiated. Or, it can act as a neuronal specification factor by promoting the stem/progenitor cell differentiation toward neurons in the expense of glia. This will also result in increased number of neurons in the culture, but without changing the overall cell number. Or, it can act as a mitogen for committed neuronal progenitors that differentiate only into neurons. Increasing this subpopulation would also increase the final number of neurons in the culture. Or, it can act as a survival factor to rescue immature neurons from undergoing cell death during differentiation, which will result in increased neurons (FIG. 1). [0102]
  • The assay method here captures all of these possibilities by allowing for sufficient time for these processes to unfold. In a preferred embodiment, for human neural stem/progenitor cells, the assay is continued for seven days. A minimum of three days from the onset of differentiation should be allowed for stable expression of definitive neuronal markers to appear. A sufficient time is also required for a compound action on differentiation and/or proliferation to take place to a sufficient degree to be reliably detectable. Manifestation of drug-induced changes in neuron number takes a minimum of three days for the human cells to be detectable. [0103]
  • The final neuron number is detected by immunostaining of the culture with antibodies against neurons and quantified by counting of the immunopositive neurons and/or by measuring the staining intensity. [0104]
  • 4. Method for Measuring Neurogenesis
  • (1) Undifferentiated human neural stem/progenitor cells were harvested by enzyme treatment. [0105]
  • (2) The collected cells were seeded at 40,000 cells per well of 96-well plates pre-coated with extracellular matrix proteins (e.g., Biocoat PDL, Fisher). The seeding media is a standard serum-free, growth factor-free, basal media that supports healthy neuronal/glial survival, such as N2 without phenol red. [0106]
  • (3) Test agents at appropriate concentrations were added to each well on [0107] Day 0.
  • (4) The assay plates were incubated for 7 days, with 50% media change at every other day. On [0108] Day 2, 4, and 6 of post-plating, additional increment of the screening agents at appropriate concentrations were added to each well.
  • (5) On the final day of the culture (Day 7), alamar blue dye was added to each well and the cultures were further incubated for 2 hours at 37° C. [0109]
  • (6) The fluorescence of the oxidized dye in each well was read by a fluorescent plate reader with the following settings: [0110]
  • Read Mode End Point [0111]
  • Excitation 530 nm, emission 590 nm, cutoff 570 nm [0112]
  • The fluorescence level is proportional to the number of respiring cells in the culture and is a measure of a proliferative activity of a test agent (FIG. 2). [0113]
  • (7) After the alamar blue assay, the cells were fixed and stained with antibodies against neuron-specific antigens according to standard procedures. Typical antigens effective were TypeIII-beta tubulin and MAP2c. [0114]
  • (8) The total cell number in each well was quantified by staining the cultures with a nuclear dye such as DAPI or Hoechst according to standard procedures. [0115]
  • (9) As a preliminary detection of positive activities, the overall immunostaining intensity in each well was read by a fluorescence plate reader. For the positive hits, more quantitative analysis was carried out by automated morphometric counting of individual cells. [0116]
  • 5. EXAMPLES Example 1
  • Selection of a positive control. [0117]
  • Several neurotrophic factors—including brain-derived neurotrophic factor, glia-derived neurotrophic factor, neurotrophic factor-3, and leukemia inhibitory factor—suggested to have neurogenic properties were tested in the assay described above. Only one (leukemia inhibitory factor) was effective (FIGS. 3A and 3B). Thus, the assay can discriminate test agents for selectively having a neurogenic activity. The positive control utilized is leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), a cytokine growth factor, at 20 ng/ml. The selection of LIF as the positive control is based on its properties to increase by 2-3 fold the number of neurons and glia. This effect validates both the neural stem cell system, in which, should a compound be effective in neurogenesis, the cells respond appropriately by enhanced differentiation and/or mitosis, and the assay method in which such cellular responses can be measured reproducibly and quantifiably. [0118]
  • Example 2
  • Primary screening of unknown compounds. [0119]
  • 5,628 synthetic compounds of the type Fused Imidazoles, Aminopyrimidines, Nicotinamides, Aminomethyl Phenoxypiperidines and Aryloxypiperidines are evaluated for their effect on neurogenesis according the assay method described above. From the preliminary analysis using the fluorescent plate reader, over 300 compounds to date showed initial positive activity. Those were re-analyzed by quantitative neuron counting. Among them, 30 compounds significantly increased cell number (“proliferation”, FIG. 4); 53 increased the number of neurons (“neurogenesis”, FIG. 5 & FIG. 6); and 7 showed significant activity in both. The significance level was empirically set at an activity above 30% change over the vehicle control for proliferation and above 10% change for neurogenesis. A summary of the result in the compound screening is provided in Table I. [0120]
    TABLE I
    Summary of Compound Screening
    Primary Hits Proliferation Neurogenesis Double
    Screen Confirmed Hit Hit Hit
    0 0 0 0 0
    2,240 88 13 8 1
    5,628 >300 30 53 7
  • Example 3
  • Dose-response profiles. [0121]
  • Linearity of dose-response and in vitro neurotoxicity are used to further filter down desired compounds from the primary screen. The dose-response curve measures neurogenesis over a concentration range of 100 picaM to 100 microM. The rationale for this is to eliminate early on those compounds with pronounced toxicity and those without a dose-dependent effect on neurogenesis. Examples of several primary hits fully analyzed for dose-response are shown in FIG. 7. Significantly, most compounds exhibit a linear response over several log concentrations below 1 microM. This indicates that the assay for primary screening is reliable and that the quality of the compound library is high. Table II contains the summary of EC50 of each compound tested. On the other hand, at high concentrations (100 microM), some, but not all showed high level of neurotoxicity, indicating that analyzing dose-response curves will be discriminatory and serve as an effective early filter. [0122]
    TABLE II
    Activity Profile of Primary Hits in Vitro
    Neuron
    Proliferation Ratio EC50 for Other
    Compound (% of (% of Neuron Characterization
    ID Control) Control Number Of Toxicity
    NSI-106 211 ± 48  92 ± 6 0.1 nM r2 No Toxicity
    0.75
    NSI-144 149 ± 15 137 ± 8 1.0 nM r2 No Toxicity
    0.54
    NSI-152 174 ± 49 112 ± 4 0.1 nM r2 Toxic At
    0.84 Highest
    Dose
    NSI-154 211 ± 63 102 ± 6 0.3 nM r2 No Toxicity
    0.79
    NSI-155 198 ± 44 118 ± 8 0.05 nM Toxic At
    r2 0.49 Highest
    Dose
    NSI-163 208 ± 25  120 ± 11 1.0 nM r2 Toxic At
    0.81 Highest
    Dose
  • Utilities of the Invention
  • In one aspect of this invention an agent would be administered to treat a neurodegenerative disease. In a preferred embodiment of this invention the neurodegenerative disease would be Alzheimer's disease, dementia, mild cognitive impairment, aged-related cognitive decline, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, demyelination, stroke, spinal injuries, traumatic injuries, neuropathic pain, and the like. [0123]
  • In another of its aspects, this invention the agent would be administered to treat a psychiatric disease. In a preferred embodiment of this invention the psychiatric disease is depression, post-traumatic stress syndrome, stress, anxiety, schizophrenia, sleep deprivation, cogntive dysfunction, amnesia, and the like. [0124]
  • In another aspect of the invention an agent would be administered by any number of routes and multipotent stem cells or differentiated multipotent stem cells would be transplanted into brain. [0125]
  • In another aspect of the invention the structures of the formula are utilized in above methods: [0126]
    Figure US20040185429A1-20040923-C00001
  • While the invention has been described in connection with what is presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments, but on the contrary is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. [0127]
  • Thus, it is to be understood that variations in the present invention can be made without departing from the novel aspects of this invention as defined in the claims. [0128]
  • All patents and articles cited herein are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety and relied upon. [0129]

Claims (18)

What is claimed is:
1. A method of selecting a neurogenic agent, comprising the steps of:
(a) obtaining a stable neural progenitor cell line;
(b) plating undifferentiated neural progenitor cells into an assay plate;
(c) culturing the neural progenitor cells in a serum-free, mitogen-free medium;
(d) exposing the neural progenitor cells to a test agent; and
(e) measuring a change in the number of neurons.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is derived from mammalian CNS.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is derived from human CNS.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is derived from human hippocampus.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is derived from human subventricular zone.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is derived from mammalian pluripotent or totipotent stem cells.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is capable of differentiating into neurons and glia.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the neural progenitor cell line is capable of differentiating into neurons.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the test agent is a fused imidazole, as described in Structure Formula 1.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the test agent is a aminopyrimidine, as described in Structure Formula 2.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the test agent is a nicotinamide, as described in Structure Formula 3.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the test agent is an aminomethyl phenoxypiperidine, as described in Structure Formula 4.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the test agent is an aryloxypiperidine, as described in Structure Formula 5.
14. A method for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders comprising the step of administering a fused imidazole, as described in Structure Formula 1, to a patient in need thereof.
15. A method for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders comprising the step of administering an aminopyrimidine, as described in Structure Formula 2, to a patient in need thereof.
16. A method for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders comprising the step of administering a nicotinamide, as described in Structure Formula 3, to a patient in need thereof.
17. A method for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders comprising the step of administering an aminomethyl phenoxypiperidine, as described in Structure Formula 4, to a patient in need thereof.
18. A method for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders comprising the step of administering an aryloxypiperidine, as described in Structure Formula 5, to a patient in need thereof.
US10/728,652 2002-12-09 2003-12-05 Method for discovering neurogenic agents Abandoned US20040185429A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/728,652 US20040185429A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2003-12-05 Method for discovering neurogenic agents
US11/852,922 US8293488B2 (en) 2002-12-09 2007-09-10 Method for screening neurogenic agents
US13/658,623 US20130045487A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2012-10-23 Method for discovering neurogenic agents

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US43235902P 2002-12-09 2002-12-09
US49367403P 2003-08-08 2003-08-08
US10/728,652 US20040185429A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2003-12-05 Method for discovering neurogenic agents

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/852,922 Division US8293488B2 (en) 2002-12-09 2007-09-10 Method for screening neurogenic agents

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20040185429A1 true US20040185429A1 (en) 2004-09-23

Family

ID=40846261

Family Applications (8)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/728,652 Abandoned US20040185429A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2003-12-05 Method for discovering neurogenic agents
US12/049,922 Active US7560553B1 (en) 2003-08-08 2008-03-17 Use of fuse nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US12/500,073 Active 2024-10-01 US7858628B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2009-07-09 Use of fused nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US12/939,897 Active US8058434B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2010-11-04 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US12/939,914 Active US8030492B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2010-11-04 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US13/269,507 Expired - Fee Related US8362262B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2011-10-07 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US13/744,220 Active US8674098B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2013-01-17 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US14/170,344 Active US8846914B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2014-01-31 Compositions to effect neuronal growth

Family Applications After (7)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/049,922 Active US7560553B1 (en) 2003-08-08 2008-03-17 Use of fuse nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US12/500,073 Active 2024-10-01 US7858628B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2009-07-09 Use of fused nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US12/939,897 Active US8058434B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2010-11-04 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US12/939,914 Active US8030492B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2010-11-04 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US13/269,507 Expired - Fee Related US8362262B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2011-10-07 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US13/744,220 Active US8674098B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2013-01-17 Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US14/170,344 Active US8846914B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2014-01-31 Compositions to effect neuronal growth

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (8) US20040185429A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1576134B1 (en)
AU (1) AU2003293409A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2004053071A2 (en)

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20060067918A1 (en) * 2004-09-30 2006-03-30 John Sinden Cell lines
WO2007053596A1 (en) 2005-10-31 2007-05-10 Braincells, Inc. Gaba receptor mediated modulation of neurogenesis
US20080167363A1 (en) * 2006-12-28 2008-07-10 Braincells, Inc Modulation of Neurogenesis By Melatoninergic Agents
US20080171750A1 (en) * 2007-01-11 2008-07-17 Braincells, Inc. Modulation Of Neurogenesis With Use of Modafinil
US20080188457A1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2008-08-07 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of Neurogenesis with Biguanides and GSK3-beta Agents
US7560553B1 (en) 2003-08-08 2009-07-14 Neuralstem, Inc. Use of fuse nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US20090197823A1 (en) * 2006-05-09 2009-08-06 Braincells, Inc. Aliskiren modulation of neurogenesis
US20090239834A1 (en) * 2008-03-21 2009-09-24 Braincells, Inc. Mcc-257 modulation of neurogenesis
US7678808B2 (en) 2006-05-09 2010-03-16 Braincells, Inc. 5 HT receptor mediated neurogenesis
US20100068187A1 (en) * 2006-08-31 2010-03-18 Roisen Fred J Transcription factors for differentiation of adult human olfactory progenitor cells
WO2010099217A1 (en) 2009-02-25 2010-09-02 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis using d-cycloserine combinations
WO2010106495A1 (en) 2009-03-20 2010-09-23 H.L. Hall & Sons Limited Sceletium extract and uses thereof
US7838292B1 (en) 2001-03-29 2010-11-23 University Of Louisville Research Foundation, Inc. Methods for obtaining adult human olfactory progenitor cells
EP2258357A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-12-08 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis with acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
EP2275096A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2011-01-19 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis via modulation of the muscarinic receptors
WO2011063115A1 (en) 2009-11-19 2011-05-26 Braincells Inc. Combination of nootropic agent with one or more neurogenic or neurogenic sensitizing agents for stimulating or increasing neurogenesis
US7985756B2 (en) 2005-10-21 2011-07-26 Braincells Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis by PDE inhibition
WO2011091033A1 (en) 2010-01-20 2011-07-28 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis by ppar agents
US7998971B2 (en) 2006-09-08 2011-08-16 Braincells Inc. Combinations containing a 4-acylaminopyridine derivative
EP2377531A2 (en) 2006-05-09 2011-10-19 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis by modulating angiotensin
WO2013028625A1 (en) * 2011-08-19 2013-02-28 Sanbio, Inc. Neurogenic and gliogenic factors and assays therefor
WO2013033246A2 (en) 2011-08-29 2013-03-07 Braincells, Inc. Novel benzodiazepinones as modulators of metabotropic glutamate receptor functions and neurological uses thereof
US8552051B2 (en) 2009-03-20 2013-10-08 H. L. Hall & Sons Limited Use of pharmaceutical compositions containing mesembrenone

Families Citing this family (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SG163588A1 (en) * 2005-07-08 2010-08-30 Braincells Inc Methods for identifying agents and conditions that modulate neurogenesis
DK2470182T3 (en) * 2009-08-24 2014-07-21 Neuralstem Inc SYNTHESIS OF A NEUROSTIMULATING PIPERAZINE
NZ715903A (en) * 2014-01-30 2017-06-30 Signal Pharm Llc Solid forms of 2-(tert-butylamino)-4-((1r,3r,4r)-3-hydroxy-4-methylcyclohexylamino)-pyrimidine-5-carboxamide, compositions thereof and methods of their use
CN106572996B (en) * 2014-06-16 2020-04-07 纽若斯丹公司 Regimen for treating Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)
WO2018048927A1 (en) * 2016-09-12 2018-03-15 Neuralstem, Inc. Amelioration of neural deficits associated with diabetes
US20180104240A1 (en) * 2016-10-18 2018-04-19 Neuralstem, Inc. Amelioration of radiation-induced cognitive dysfunction
US10413534B2 (en) 2017-02-13 2019-09-17 Neuralstem, Inc. Amelioration of certain deficiencies due to stroke
US20210106579A1 (en) * 2018-05-17 2021-04-15 Neuralstem, Inc. Amelioration of cognitive and motor deficits associated with alzheimer's
EP4346823A2 (en) 2021-06-03 2024-04-10 Alto Neuroscience, Inc. Method of treatment of depressed patients with poor cognition and selection of other patients benefiting from a benzylpiperazine-aminopyridine agent

Citations (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4753635A (en) * 1986-05-23 1988-06-28 Jacqueline Sagen Inducing analgesia by implantation of cells releasing neuroactive substances
US4980174A (en) * 1988-12-23 1990-12-25 Jacqueline Sagen Method for alleviating depression
US5082670A (en) * 1988-12-15 1992-01-21 The Regents Of The University Of California Method of grafting genetically modified cells to treat defects, disease or damage or the central nervous system
US5166065A (en) * 1988-08-04 1992-11-24 Amrad Corporation Limited In vitro propagation of embryonic stem cells
US5175103A (en) * 1991-10-21 1992-12-29 Trustees Of University Of Pennsylvania Preparation of pure cultures of post-mitotic human neurons
US5411883A (en) * 1989-12-26 1995-05-02 Somatix Therapy Corporation Proliferated neuron progenitor cell product and process
US5580777A (en) * 1987-10-29 1996-12-03 Amrad Corporation Limited Generation of neural precursor cell lines
US5589376A (en) * 1992-07-27 1996-12-31 California Institute Of Technology Mammalian neural crest stem cells
US5612211A (en) * 1990-06-08 1997-03-18 New York University Stimulation, production and culturing of hematopoietic progenitor cells by fibroblast growth factors
US5672499A (en) * 1992-07-27 1997-09-30 California Institute Of Technology Immoralized neural crest stem cells and methods of making
US5750376A (en) * 1991-07-08 1998-05-12 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. In vitro growth and proliferation of genetically modified multipotent neural stem cells and their progeny
US5753506A (en) * 1996-05-23 1998-05-19 Cns Stem Cell Technology, Inc. Isolation propagation and directed differentiation of stem cells from embryonic and adult central nervous system of mammals
US5753505A (en) * 1995-07-06 1998-05-19 Emory University Neuronal progenitor cells and uses thereof
US5770414A (en) * 1996-02-20 1998-06-23 The Regents Of The University Of California Regulatable retrovirus system for genetic modification of cells
US5819553A (en) * 1996-10-14 1998-10-13 Paloma Industries, Ltd. Absorption-type air-conditioning apparatus with by-pass pipe leading from phase separator to absorption chamber
US5824489A (en) * 1992-07-27 1998-10-20 California Institute Of Technology In vitro method for obtaining an isolated population of mammalian neural crest stem cells
US5849553A (en) * 1992-07-27 1998-12-15 California Institute Of Technology Mammalian multipotent neural stem cells
US5851832A (en) * 1991-07-08 1998-12-22 Neurospheres, Ltd. In vitro growth and proliferation of multipotent neural stem cells and their progeny
US6071889A (en) * 1991-07-08 2000-06-06 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. In vivo genetic modification of growth factor-responsive neural precursor cells
US6284539B1 (en) * 1998-10-09 2001-09-04 Neuralstem Biopharmaceuticals, Ltd. Method for generating dopaminergic cells derived from neural precursors
US20020107273A1 (en) * 2000-10-19 2002-08-08 Kazunnari Nakao Aryl or heteroaryl fused imidazole compounds as anti-inflammatory and analgesic agents
US6531464B1 (en) * 1999-12-07 2003-03-11 Inotek Pharmaceutical Corporation Methods for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders using substituted phenanthridinone derivatives
US20030059369A1 (en) * 2001-04-23 2003-03-27 Kung Hank F Amyloid plaque aggregation inhibitors and diagnostic imaging agents
US6699871B2 (en) * 2001-07-06 2004-03-02 Merck & Co., Inc. Beta-amino heterocyclic dipeptidyl peptidase inhibitors for the treatment or prevention of diabetes
US7101709B2 (en) * 1991-07-08 2006-09-05 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. Methods of screening biological agents

Family Cites Families (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0233838A3 (en) 1986-02-04 1990-01-31 Incyte Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Neurite-promoting factor and process for the manufacture thereof
AU6174490A (en) 1989-08-04 1991-03-11 Board Of Regents, The University Of Texas System Methods and compositions; purified preparation of neural progenitor regulatory factor
WO1991009936A1 (en) 1989-12-26 1991-07-11 Hana Biologics, Inc. Proliferated neuron progenitor cell product and process
US5196315A (en) 1990-05-01 1993-03-23 The Johns Hopkins University Human neuronal cell line
US5085670A (en) * 1990-09-17 1992-02-04 The Dow Chemical Company Production of potassium chloride crystals
CA2113118C (en) 1991-07-08 2002-09-17 Samuel Weiss Novel growth factor-responsive progenitor cells which can be proliferated in vitro
ES2133333T3 (en) 1991-11-22 1999-09-16 Genentech Inc TGF-BETA TO IMPROVE THE RECOVERY OF NEURONS.
WO1994003199A1 (en) 1992-08-04 1994-02-17 Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Method of enhancing differentiation and survival of neuronal precursor cells
WO1994004675A2 (en) 1992-08-19 1994-03-03 Richard Kroczek Dna sequence encoding a novel member of the steroid and thyroid hormone receptor family
ATE234353T1 (en) 1992-10-28 2003-03-15 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd BIOLOGICAL FACTORS AND NEURONAL STEM CELLS
JP3952508B2 (en) 1993-11-09 2007-08-01 ニューロスフィアーズ ホウルディングス リミテッド In situ modification and manipulation of CNS stem cells
WO1996009543A1 (en) 1994-09-23 1996-03-28 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. In vitro models of cns function and dysfunction
JPH10509592A (en) 1994-11-14 1998-09-22 ニューロスフィアーズ ホウルディングス リミテッド Neural stem cell proliferation regulation
PL334304A1 (en) * 1996-12-24 2000-02-14 Chugai Pharmaceutical Co Ltd Derivatives of aromatic amines acting as nos inhibitors
AU7258098A (en) 1997-04-24 1998-11-13 California Institute Of Technology Methods for differentiating neural stem cells
AU755657B2 (en) 1997-07-04 2002-12-19 University Of Utah Research Foundation Lineage-restricted neuronal precursors
US5968829A (en) 1997-09-05 1999-10-19 Cytotherapeutics, Inc. Human CNS neural stem cells
US5928847A (en) * 1998-03-13 1999-07-27 Eastman Kodak Company Photographic element having ultrathin tabular grains
CA2339303A1 (en) * 1998-08-14 2000-02-24 California Institute Of Technology Methods of forming neurons
US20030003572A1 (en) * 1999-03-05 2003-01-02 David J. Anderson Isolation and enrichment of neural stem cells from uncultured tissue based on cell-surface marker expression
WO2000064877A1 (en) 1999-04-26 2000-11-02 Neurogen Corporation 2-aminoquinolinecarboxamides: neurokinin receptor ligands
US20020009743A1 (en) * 2000-05-17 2002-01-24 Carpenter Melissa K. Neural progenitor cell populations
WO2002058736A2 (en) * 2000-12-12 2002-08-01 Neotherapetics, Inc. Use of 9-substituted purine analogues and other molecules to stimulate neurogenesis
US7449456B2 (en) * 2002-06-28 2008-11-11 Astellas Pharma, Inc. Diaminopyrimidinecarboxamide derivative
AU2003293409A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2004-06-30 Karl K. Johe Method for discovering neurogenic agents

Patent Citations (28)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4753635A (en) * 1986-05-23 1988-06-28 Jacqueline Sagen Inducing analgesia by implantation of cells releasing neuroactive substances
US5580777A (en) * 1987-10-29 1996-12-03 Amrad Corporation Limited Generation of neural precursor cell lines
US5166065A (en) * 1988-08-04 1992-11-24 Amrad Corporation Limited In vitro propagation of embryonic stem cells
US5082670A (en) * 1988-12-15 1992-01-21 The Regents Of The University Of California Method of grafting genetically modified cells to treat defects, disease or damage or the central nervous system
US4980174A (en) * 1988-12-23 1990-12-25 Jacqueline Sagen Method for alleviating depression
US5411883A (en) * 1989-12-26 1995-05-02 Somatix Therapy Corporation Proliferated neuron progenitor cell product and process
US5612211A (en) * 1990-06-08 1997-03-18 New York University Stimulation, production and culturing of hematopoietic progenitor cells by fibroblast growth factors
US5851832A (en) * 1991-07-08 1998-12-22 Neurospheres, Ltd. In vitro growth and proliferation of multipotent neural stem cells and their progeny
US7101709B2 (en) * 1991-07-08 2006-09-05 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. Methods of screening biological agents
US6071889A (en) * 1991-07-08 2000-06-06 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. In vivo genetic modification of growth factor-responsive neural precursor cells
US5750376A (en) * 1991-07-08 1998-05-12 Neurospheres Holdings Ltd. In vitro growth and proliferation of genetically modified multipotent neural stem cells and their progeny
US5175103A (en) * 1991-10-21 1992-12-29 Trustees Of University Of Pennsylvania Preparation of pure cultures of post-mitotic human neurons
US5589376A (en) * 1992-07-27 1996-12-31 California Institute Of Technology Mammalian neural crest stem cells
US5928947A (en) * 1992-07-27 1999-07-27 California Institute Of Technology Mammalian multipotent neural stem cells
US5672499A (en) * 1992-07-27 1997-09-30 California Institute Of Technology Immoralized neural crest stem cells and methods of making
US5693482A (en) * 1992-07-27 1997-12-02 California Institute Of Technology Neural chest stem cell assay
US5824489A (en) * 1992-07-27 1998-10-20 California Institute Of Technology In vitro method for obtaining an isolated population of mammalian neural crest stem cells
US5849553A (en) * 1992-07-27 1998-12-15 California Institute Of Technology Mammalian multipotent neural stem cells
US5753505A (en) * 1995-07-06 1998-05-19 Emory University Neuronal progenitor cells and uses thereof
US5770414A (en) * 1996-02-20 1998-06-23 The Regents Of The University Of California Regulatable retrovirus system for genetic modification of cells
US5753506A (en) * 1996-05-23 1998-05-19 Cns Stem Cell Technology, Inc. Isolation propagation and directed differentiation of stem cells from embryonic and adult central nervous system of mammals
US6040180A (en) * 1996-05-23 2000-03-21 Neuralstem Biopharmaceuticals, Ltd. In vitro generation of differentiated neurons from cultures of mammalian multipotential CNS stem cells
US5819553A (en) * 1996-10-14 1998-10-13 Paloma Industries, Ltd. Absorption-type air-conditioning apparatus with by-pass pipe leading from phase separator to absorption chamber
US6284539B1 (en) * 1998-10-09 2001-09-04 Neuralstem Biopharmaceuticals, Ltd. Method for generating dopaminergic cells derived from neural precursors
US6531464B1 (en) * 1999-12-07 2003-03-11 Inotek Pharmaceutical Corporation Methods for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders using substituted phenanthridinone derivatives
US20020107273A1 (en) * 2000-10-19 2002-08-08 Kazunnari Nakao Aryl or heteroaryl fused imidazole compounds as anti-inflammatory and analgesic agents
US20030059369A1 (en) * 2001-04-23 2003-03-27 Kung Hank F Amyloid plaque aggregation inhibitors and diagnostic imaging agents
US6699871B2 (en) * 2001-07-06 2004-03-02 Merck & Co., Inc. Beta-amino heterocyclic dipeptidyl peptidase inhibitors for the treatment or prevention of diabetes

Cited By (51)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7838292B1 (en) 2001-03-29 2010-11-23 University Of Louisville Research Foundation, Inc. Methods for obtaining adult human olfactory progenitor cells
US20110014695A1 (en) * 2001-03-29 2011-01-20 Roisen Fred J Methods for obtaining adult human olfactory progenitor cells
US20100034784A1 (en) * 2003-08-08 2010-02-11 Neuralstem, Inc. Use of fused nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US7560553B1 (en) 2003-08-08 2009-07-14 Neuralstem, Inc. Use of fuse nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US8362262B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2013-01-29 Neuralstem, Inc. Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US8058434B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2011-11-15 Neuralstem, Inc. Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US8030492B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2011-10-04 Neuralstem, Inc. Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US7858628B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2010-12-28 Neuralstem, Inc. Use of fused nicotinamides to promote neurogenesis
US8674098B2 (en) 2003-08-08 2014-03-18 Neuralstem, Inc. Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US20110052552A1 (en) * 2003-08-08 2011-03-03 Judith Kelleher-Andersson Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US20110135612A1 (en) * 2003-08-08 2011-06-09 Judith Kelleher-Andersson Compositions to effect neuronal growth
US20080118479A1 (en) * 2004-09-30 2008-05-22 John Sinden Cell Lines
US7419827B2 (en) * 2004-09-30 2008-09-02 Reneuron Limited Cell lines
US7666672B2 (en) 2004-09-30 2010-02-23 Reneuron Limited Cell lines
US20060104959A1 (en) * 2004-09-30 2006-05-18 John Sinden Cell lines
US20060067918A1 (en) * 2004-09-30 2006-03-30 John Sinden Cell lines
US7416888B2 (en) * 2004-09-30 2008-08-26 Reneuron Limited Cell lines
EP2275096A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2011-01-19 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis via modulation of the muscarinic receptors
EP2258357A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-12-08 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis with acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
EP2258358A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-12-08 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis with acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
EP2258359A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-12-08 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis by muscarinic receptor modulation with sabcomelin
EP2275095A2 (en) 2005-08-26 2011-01-19 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis by muscarinic receptor modulation
EP2377530A2 (en) 2005-10-21 2011-10-19 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis by PDE inhibition
US7985756B2 (en) 2005-10-21 2011-07-26 Braincells Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis by PDE inhibition
WO2007053596A1 (en) 2005-10-31 2007-05-10 Braincells, Inc. Gaba receptor mediated modulation of neurogenesis
EP2314289A1 (en) 2005-10-31 2011-04-27 Braincells, Inc. Gaba receptor mediated modulation of neurogenesis
US7678808B2 (en) 2006-05-09 2010-03-16 Braincells, Inc. 5 HT receptor mediated neurogenesis
EP2382975A2 (en) 2006-05-09 2011-11-02 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis by modulating angiotensin
US20090197823A1 (en) * 2006-05-09 2009-08-06 Braincells, Inc. Aliskiren modulation of neurogenesis
EP2377531A2 (en) 2006-05-09 2011-10-19 Braincells, Inc. Neurogenesis by modulating angiotensin
US20100068187A1 (en) * 2006-08-31 2010-03-18 Roisen Fred J Transcription factors for differentiation of adult human olfactory progenitor cells
US7998971B2 (en) 2006-09-08 2011-08-16 Braincells Inc. Combinations containing a 4-acylaminopyridine derivative
US20080167363A1 (en) * 2006-12-28 2008-07-10 Braincells, Inc Modulation of Neurogenesis By Melatoninergic Agents
US20080171750A1 (en) * 2007-01-11 2008-07-17 Braincells, Inc. Modulation Of Neurogenesis With Use of Modafinil
US20080188457A1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2008-08-07 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of Neurogenesis with Biguanides and GSK3-beta Agents
US20090239834A1 (en) * 2008-03-21 2009-09-24 Braincells, Inc. Mcc-257 modulation of neurogenesis
WO2010099217A1 (en) 2009-02-25 2010-09-02 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis using d-cycloserine combinations
WO2010106495A1 (en) 2009-03-20 2010-09-23 H.L. Hall & Sons Limited Sceletium extract and uses thereof
US8980338B2 (en) 2009-03-20 2015-03-17 H.L. Hall & Sons Limited Sceletium extract and uses thereof
US9381220B2 (en) 2009-03-20 2016-07-05 H. L. Hall & Sons Limited Sceletium extract and uses thereof
US8552051B2 (en) 2009-03-20 2013-10-08 H. L. Hall & Sons Limited Use of pharmaceutical compositions containing mesembrenone
WO2010111136A2 (en) 2009-03-23 2010-09-30 Braincells, Inc. Aliskiren modulation of neurogenesis
WO2011063115A1 (en) 2009-11-19 2011-05-26 Braincells Inc. Combination of nootropic agent with one or more neurogenic or neurogenic sensitizing agents for stimulating or increasing neurogenesis
WO2011091033A1 (en) 2010-01-20 2011-07-28 Braincells, Inc. Modulation of neurogenesis by ppar agents
JP2017038613A (en) * 2011-08-19 2017-02-23 サンバイオ,インコーポレイティド Neurogenic and gliogenic factors and assays therefor
JP2014524257A (en) * 2011-08-19 2014-09-22 サンバイオ,インコーポレイティド Neurogenic and glial progenitors and assays for them
WO2013028625A1 (en) * 2011-08-19 2013-02-28 Sanbio, Inc. Neurogenic and gliogenic factors and assays therefor
CN107513551A (en) * 2011-08-19 2017-12-26 桑比欧公司 The neurogenic factor and colloid generation sex factor and its measure
JP2020072767A (en) * 2011-08-19 2020-05-14 サンバイオ,インコーポレイティド Neurogenic and gliogenic factors and assays therefor
JP7007409B2 (en) 2011-08-19 2022-02-10 サンバイオ,インコーポレイティド Neurogenic and glial protofactors and assays for them
WO2013033246A2 (en) 2011-08-29 2013-03-07 Braincells, Inc. Novel benzodiazepinones as modulators of metabotropic glutamate receptor functions and neurological uses thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US8674098B2 (en) 2014-03-18
US20110052552A1 (en) 2011-03-03
AU2003293409A1 (en) 2004-06-30
US20140147424A1 (en) 2014-05-29
WO2004053071A2 (en) 2004-06-24
US8030492B2 (en) 2011-10-04
AU2003293409A8 (en) 2004-06-30
US20120027733A1 (en) 2012-02-02
US20100034784A1 (en) 2010-02-11
US7560553B1 (en) 2009-07-14
US8362262B2 (en) 2013-01-29
WO2004053071A3 (en) 2006-03-30
EP1576134B1 (en) 2013-03-06
WO2004053071A9 (en) 2012-08-16
US8058434B2 (en) 2011-11-15
EP1576134A2 (en) 2005-09-21
US7858628B2 (en) 2010-12-28
EP1576134A4 (en) 2007-05-30
US8846914B2 (en) 2014-09-30
US20130195816A1 (en) 2013-08-01
US20110135612A1 (en) 2011-06-09

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
EP1576134B1 (en) Method for discovering neurogenic agents
Jansen et al. Epileptogenesis and Reduced Inward Rectifier Potassium Current in Tuberous Sclerosis Complex‐1–Deficient Astrocytes
TWI269812B (en) Therapeutic use of selective PDE10 inhibitors
Takahashi et al. Memantine ameliorates depressive-like behaviors by regulating hippocampal cell proliferation and neuroprotection in olfactory bulbectomized mice
Schnitzler et al. BMP9 (bone morphogenetic protein 9) induces NGF as an autocrine/paracrine cholinergic trophic factor in developing basal forebrain neurons
KR20100024951A (en) Methods and compositions for stimulating cells
Hassink et al. Exogenous α-synuclein hinders synaptic communication in cultured cortical primary rat neurons
US7132287B2 (en) Method for neural stem cell differentiation using 5HT-1A agonists
Uliassi et al. A focused library of psychotropic analogues with neuroprotective and neuroregenerative potential
AU2018330578A1 (en) Pentacyclic compound
Kimura et al. T‐817MA, a neurotrophic agent, ameliorates the deficits in adult neurogenesis and spatial memory in rats infused icv with amyloid‐β peptide
Taupin Protocols for studying adult neurogenesis: insights and recent developments
US8293488B2 (en) Method for screening neurogenic agents
Ko et al. Transcription factor Egr-1is required for long-term fear memory and anxiety
Grison et al. Ablation of cdk4 and cdk6 affects proliferation of basal progenitor cells in the developing dorsal and ventral forebrain
JP2012526818A (en) Methods for reducing ubiquitinated protein levels
Williams et al. Structure‐based discovery of low molecular weight compounds that stimulate neurite outgrowth and substitute for nerve growth factor
EP2266570A1 (en) Use of binding partners for 5-HT5 receptors for treating neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders
van der Ven et al. Methylene blue (tetramethylthionine chloride) influences the mobility of adult neural stem cells: a potentially novel therapeutic mechanism of a therapeutic approach in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease
Qin et al. NADPH oxidase and endoplasmic reticulum stress is associated with neuronal degeneration in orbitofrontal cortex of individuals with alcohol use disorder
Kanungo et al. Zebrafish Rohon-Beard neuron development: cdk5 in the midst
US20230014181A1 (en) Culture system and methods for improved modeling of neurological conditions
Großert Elucidation of the molecular mechanism of action of psychoactive substances as novel antidepressants
Guan et al. Cytosine arabinoside exposure induced cytotoxic effects and neural tube defects in mice and embryo stem cells
Morini et al. Development of a novel oral treatment that rescues gait ataxia and retinal degeneration in a phenotypic mouse model of familial dysautonomia

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION