# Cerebrovascular involvement in Alzheimer's Disease:  PAR4 Antagonism

> **NIH NIH RF1** · VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY · 2021 · $2,185,927

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia; it is increasingly evident that
cerebrovascular mechanisms are critically involved in AD pathology. Cerebrovascular disease frequently co-
occurs with AD. One driver of this disease is pathologic fibrin deposition (PFD) in the cerebrovasculature
caused by resistance to plasmin-mediated fibrin breakdown. PFD is a risk factor for AD, both non genetic
(traumatic brain injury) and genetic (ApoE4), and amyloid beta (Aβ) modifies the fibrin clot, making it resistant
to plasmin cleavage and worsening PFD. Thrombin cleaves fibrinogen to fibrin and it also activates platelets by
cleaving and activating protease-activated receptors PAR1 and PAR4. We have found that platelet PAR4 is
responsible for greater platelet activation, thrombin generation, and procoagulant microparticle formation than
platelet PAR1. PAR4 is also expressed on endothelial cells, leukocytes, microglia and neurons, where it is
activated by thrombin, leading to activation of microglia, blood brain barrier (BBB) breakdown and microbleeds.
Lymphocyte PAR4 is required for homing to sites of inflammation and PAR4 expression is inducible under
inflammatory conditions, leading to exaggerated local damage. F2RL3, the gene encoding PAR4, is
hypomethylated under inflammatory conditions. Our hypothesis is that PAR4 antagonism may minimize PFD
by 1) decreasing thrombin generation and fibrin deposition, and 2) blocking lymphocyte infiltration and local
tissue damage. In support of our hypothesis, we have found in preliminary data that PAR4 is overexpressed in
the cerebrovasculature of 5XFAD mice with 5 familial AD mutations. In addition, we have shown that in aged
humans higher levels of F2RL3 expression in the prefrontal cortex are associated with a faster rate of cognitive
decline. As a GPCR, PAR4 is an attractive therapeutic target, and we have made significant progress on
generating PAR4 antagonists. However, they do not yet have potent activity against the endogenous tethered
ligand in either human or mouse platelets, or the DMPK characteristics to be useful in vivo. In Aim 1, we
propose to use a computational approach starting with comparative models of both mouse and human PAR4
to screen an ultra-large library using DOCK and ROSETTA, combined with a make-on-demand small molecule
library. Based on the success of the Shoichet and Roth laboratories using this approach to generate pM
potency, highly selective compounds for GPCRs, we expect to enrich the scaffold diversity of our SAR. We will
iteratively screen compounds in mouse and human platelets, then redo the computational screening to further
improve SAR. In Aims 2 and 3, traditional medicinal chemistry will then again iteratively improve the properties
of antagonists for potency against the tethered ligand, selectivity and in vivo bioavailability. The best antagonist
of mouse PAR4 will be tested in 5XFAD mice to determine if it can slow or block progression of AD sympto...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10212053
- **Project number:** 1RF1AG068623-01A1
- **Recipient organization:** VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** HEIDI E HAMM
- **Activity code:** RF1 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $2,185,927
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2021-05-15 → 2024-04-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10212053

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10212053, Cerebrovascular involvement in Alzheimer's Disease:  PAR4 Antagonism (1RF1AG068623-01A1). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10212053. Licensed CC0.

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