McGuinness M C, Wei H, Smith K D
Kennedy Krieger Institute, Room 400A, 707 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Expert Opin Investig Drugs. 2000 Sep;9(9):1985-92. doi: 10.1517/13543784.9.9.1985.
Clinically, peroxisome biogenesis disorders (PBDs) are a group of lethal diseases with a continuum of severity of clinical symptoms ranging from the most severe form, Zellweger syndrome, to the milder forms, infantile Refsum disease and rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata. PBDs are characterised by a number of biochemical abnormalities including impaired degradation of peroxide, very long chain fatty acids, pipecolic acid, phytanic acid and xenobiotics and impaired synthesis of plasmalogens, bile acids, cholesterol and docosahexaenoic acid. Treatment of PBD patients as a group is problematic since a number of patients, especially those with Zellweger syndrome, have significant neocortical alterations in the brain at birth so that full recovery would be impossible even with postnatal therapy. To date, treatment of PBD patients has generally involved only supportive care and symptomatic therapy. However, the fact that some of the milder PBD patients live into the second decade has prompted research into possible treatments for these patients. A number of experimental therapies have been evaluated to determine whether or not correction of biochemical abnormalities through dietary supplementation and/or modification is of clinical benefit to PBD patients. Another approach has been pharmacological induction of peroxisomes in PBD patients to improve overall peroxisomal biochemical function. Well known rodent peroxisomal proliferators were found not to induce human peroxisomes. Recently, our laboratory demonstrated that sodium 4-phenylbutyrate induces peroxisome proliferation and improves biochemical function (very long chain fatty acid beta-oxidation rates and very long chain fatty acid and plasmalogens levels) in fibroblast cell lines from patients with milder PBD phenotypes. Dietary supplementation and/or modification and pharmacological induction of peroxisomes as treatment strategies for PBD patients will be the subject of this review.
临床上,过氧化物酶体生物发生障碍(PBDs)是一组致死性疾病,临床症状严重程度呈连续性变化,从最严重的形式——泽尔韦格综合征,到较轻的形式——婴儿型雷夫叙姆病和肢根型点状软骨发育不良。PBDs的特征是存在多种生化异常,包括过氧化物、极长链脂肪酸、哌可酸、植烷酸和外源性物质的降解受损,以及缩醛磷脂、胆汁酸、胆固醇和二十二碳六烯酸的合成受损。对PBD患者群体进行治疗存在问题,因为许多患者,尤其是泽尔韦格综合征患者,出生时大脑新皮质就有明显改变,所以即使进行产后治疗也不可能完全康复。迄今为止,PBD患者的治疗通常仅涉及支持性护理和对症治疗。然而,一些症状较轻的PBD患者活到第二个十年这一事实促使人们对这些患者的可能治疗方法进行研究。已经评估了多种实验性疗法,以确定通过饮食补充和/或调整来纠正生化异常对PBD患者是否具有临床益处。另一种方法是对PBD患者进行过氧化物酶体的药物诱导,以改善整体过氧化物酶体生化功能。人们发现,著名的啮齿动物过氧化物酶体增殖剂不会诱导人类过氧化物酶体。最近,我们实验室证明,4-苯基丁酸钠可诱导过氧化物酶体增殖,并改善症状较轻的PBD表型患者成纤维细胞系中的生化功能(极长链脂肪酸β氧化速率以及极长链脂肪酸和缩醛磷脂水平)。饮食补充和/或调整以及过氧化物酶体的药物诱导作为PBD患者的治疗策略将是本综述的主题。