Centre for Advanced Discovery and Experimental Therapeutics, NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK.
Drugs. 2011 Jul 9;71(10):1281-320. doi: 10.2165/11591370-000000000-00000.
This article reviews recent evidence, much of which has been generated by my group's research programme, which has identified for the first time a previously unknown copper-overload state that is central to the pathogenesis of diabetic organ damage. This state causes tissue damage in the blood vessels, heart, kidneys, retina and nerves through copper-mediated oxidative stress. This author now considers this copper-overload state to provide an important new target for therapeutic intervention, the objective of which is to prevent or reverse the diabetic complications. Triethylenetetramine (TETA) has recently been identified as the first in a new class of anti-diabetic molecules through the original work reviewed here, thus providing a new use for this molecule, which was previously approved by the US FDA in 1985 as a second-line treatment for Wilson's disease. TETA acts as a highly selective divalent copper (Cu(II)) chelator that prevents or reverses diabetic copper overload, thereby suppressing oxidative stress. TETA treatment of diabetic animals and patients has identified and quantified the interlinked defects in copper metabolism that characterize this systemic copper overload state. Copper overload in diabetes mellitus differs from that in Wilson's disease through differences in their respective causative molecular mechanisms, and resulting differences in tissue localization and behaviour of the excess copper. Elevated pathogenetic tissue binding of copper occurs in diabetes. It may well be mediated by advanced-glycation endproduct (AGE) modification of susceptible amino-acid residues in long-lived fibrous proteins, for example, connective tissue collagens in locations such as blood vessel walls. These AGE modifications can act as localized, fixed endogenous chelators that increase the chelatable-copper content of organs such as the heart and kidneys by binding excessive amounts of catalytically active Cu(II) in specific vascular beds, thereby focusing the related copper-mediated oxidative stress in susceptible tissues. In this review, summarized evidence from our clinical studies in healthy volunteers and diabetic patients with left-ventricular hypertrophy, and from nonclinical models of diabetic cardiac, arterial, renal and neural disease is used to construct descriptions of the mechanisms by which TETA treatment prevents injury and regenerates damaged organs. Our recent phase II proof-of-principle studies in patients with type 2 diabetes and in nonclinical models of diabetes have helped to define the pathogenetic defects in copper regulation, and have shown that they are reversible by TETA. The drug tightly binds and extracts excess systemic Cu(II) into the urine whilst neutralizing its catalytic activity, but does not cause systemic copper deficiency, even after prolonged use. Its physicochemical properties, which are pivotal for its safety and efficacy, clearly differentiate it from all other clinically available transition metal chelators, including D-penicillamine, ammonium tetrathiomolybdate and clioquinol. The studies reviewed here show that TETA treatment is generally effective in preventing or reversing diabetic organ damage, and support its ongoing development as a new medicine for diabetes. Trientine (TETA dihydrochloride) has been used since the mid-1980s as a second-line treatment for Wilson's disease, and our recent clinical studies have reinforced the impression that it is likely to be safe for long-term use in patients with diabetes and related metabolic disorders. There is substantive evidence to support the view that diabetes shares many pathogenetic mechanisms with Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. Indeed, the close epidemiological and molecular linkages between them point to Alzheimer's disease/vascular dementia as a further therapeutic target where experimental pharmacotherapy with TETA could well find further clinical application.
本文回顾了近期的研究证据,其中大部分是由我的研究小组的研究项目产生的,该项目首次确定了一种以前未知的铜过载状态,这种状态是糖尿病器官损伤发病机制的核心。这种状态通过铜介导的氧化应激导致血管、心脏、肾脏、视网膜和神经的组织损伤。作者现在认为这种铜过载状态为治疗干预提供了一个重要的新靶点,其目标是预防或逆转糖尿病并发症。三乙烯四胺(TETA)最近被确定为通过本文综述的原始工作而发现的一类新的抗糖尿病分子,从而为这种分子提供了新的用途,该分子于 1985 年经美国 FDA 批准用于治疗威尔逊病的二线治疗。TETA 作为一种高度选择性的二价铜(Cu(II))螯合剂,可预防或逆转糖尿病铜过载,从而抑制氧化应激。TETA 对糖尿病动物和患者的治疗,确定并量化了这种全身性铜过载状态的相互关联的铜代谢缺陷。糖尿病中的铜过载与威尔逊病中的铜过载不同,这是由于它们各自的致病分子机制不同,以及由此导致的组织定位和多余铜的行为不同。在糖尿病中,致病组织中铜的结合增加。它可能通过晚期糖基化终产物(AGE)修饰在寿命较长的纤维蛋白(例如血管壁中的结缔组织胶原)中的易感氨基酸残基来介导。这些 AGE 修饰可以作为局部的、固定的内源性螯合剂,通过在特定的血管床中结合过量的催化活性 Cu(II),从而增加心脏和肾脏等器官的可螯合铜含量,从而使相关的铜介导的氧化应激集中在易感组织中。在这篇综述中,我们使用来自健康志愿者和左心室肥厚的糖尿病患者的临床研究以及糖尿病心脏、动脉、肾脏和神经疾病的非临床模型中的综合证据,构建了 TETA 治疗预防损伤和再生受损器官的机制描述。我们最近在 2 型糖尿病患者和糖尿病非临床模型中的 II 期概念验证研究有助于定义铜调节的致病缺陷,并表明 TETA 可使其逆转。该药物将多余的系统性 Cu(II)紧密结合并提取到尿液中,同时中和其催化活性,但即使长期使用也不会引起系统性铜缺乏。其物理化学性质对于其安全性和疗效至关重要,与所有其他临床可用的过渡金属螯合剂(包括 D-青霉胺、四硫钼酸铵和氯喹啉)明显不同。本文综述的研究表明,TETA 治疗通常可有效预防或逆转糖尿病器官损伤,并支持其作为糖尿病新药物的持续开发。曲替汀(TETA 二盐酸盐)自 20 世纪 80 年代中期以来一直被用作威尔逊病的二线治疗药物,我们最近的临床研究进一步证实,它可能对长期使用患有糖尿病和相关代谢紊乱的患者是安全的。有大量证据支持这样一种观点,即糖尿病与阿尔茨海默病和血管性痴呆具有许多发病机制。事实上,它们之间密切的流行病学和分子联系表明,阿尔茨海默病/血管性痴呆是另一个治疗靶点,TETA 的实验药物治疗很可能会在这一靶点找到进一步的临床应用。