Efficient in vitro screening platforms are essential for accelerating drug discovery in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. Presented at AD/PD 2024 in Lisbon and updated for AD/PD 2025 in Vienna, this poster from our Belgium neurology team presents validated microglial (HMC3) and differentiated neuronal-like (SH-SY5Y) cell models designed to recapitulate key hallmarks of neurodegeneration.
Using preformed amyloid beta (Aβ-42) and alpha-synuclein (αSyn) fibrils, the platform models fibril aggregation kinetics, neurotoxicity, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and phagocytic activity, validated against clinical reference compounds Edaravone and Aducanumab. These reproducible assays provide a cost-effective, higher-throughput approach to compound prioritization prior to in vivo progression — a practical mechanistic filter for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease drug discovery programs.
| Conference | AD/PD™ 2025 — International Conference on Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Diseases |
| Dates / Location / Booth | April 1–5, 2025 | Austria Center Vienna, Vienna, Austria | #43 |
| Authors | Jolien Beeken, Yanick Fanton |
| Affiliation | Neurology research group, InnoSer Belgium |
Abstract
Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease drug development is held back due to the lack of in vitro reproducible models representing human complexity for screening disease-modifying therapeutics inexpensively, efficiently, and rapidly. Here, we present validated cellular models to enable efficient screening of disease-modifying candidate compounds for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases prior to, or in conjunction with, in vivo screening.
Microglial (HMC3) and differentiated neuronal-like (SH-SY5Y) cells were treated with preformed amyloid beta (Aβ-42) or alpha-synuclein (αSyn) fibrils. Common neurodegeneration hallmarks — aggregation, neurotoxicity, ROS production, and phagocytosis — were modelled using validated assay formats. Supplementary data further demonstrate αSyn-specific and glutamate-induced neurotoxicity assays.
Aβ-42 fibril aggregation kinetics were confirmed by Thioflavin-T fluorescence assay. Fibrillar Aβ-42 and αSyn induced cell toxicity in both neuronal and microglial cells. Aβ fibrils induced ROS production in SH-SY5Y cells, rescued by Edaravone co-treatment. In HMC3 cells, Aβ-42 fibril treatment induced increased phagocytic capacity, further elevated upon Aducanumab co-treatment.
These cellular models serve as a highly efficient tool for compound screening before in vivo progression, providing target-specific mechanistic insights with higher throughput capabilities than animal disease models.

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