Abstract
SARM1 regulates axonal degeneration through its NAD-metabolizing activity and is a drug target for neurodegenerative disorders. We designed and synthesized fluorescent conjugates of styryl derivative with pyridine to serve as substrates of SARM1, which exhibited large red-shifts after conversion. With the conjugates, SARM1 activation was visualized in live cells following elevation of endogenous NMN or treatment with a cell-permeant NMN-analog. In neurons, imaging documented SARM1 activation preceded vincristine-induced axonal degeneration by hours. Library screening identified a derivative of nisoldipine as a covalent inhibitor of SARM1 that reacted with Cys311 in its Armadillo-domain and blocked its NMN-activation, protecting axons from degeneration. CryoEM showed that SARM1 was locked into an inactive conformation by the inhibitor, uncovering an unsuspected neuroprotective mechanism of dihydropyridines.