Room 1.004, AV Hill Building, School of Biomedicine, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PT, UK.
Curr Med Chem. 2012;19(17):2828-60. doi: 10.2174/092986712800609715.
Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction have been identified by many workers as key pathogenic mechanisms in ageing-related metabolic, cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases (for example diabetes mellitus, heart failure and Alzheimer's disease). However, although numerous molecular mechanisms have been advanced to account for these processes, their precise nature remains obscure. This author has previously suggested that, in such diseases, these two mechanisms are likely to occur as manifestations of a single underlying disturbance of copper regulation. Copper is an essential but highly-toxic trace metal that is closely regulated in biological systems. Several rare genetic disorders of copper homeostasis are known in humans: these primarily affect various proteins that mediate intracellular copper transport processes, and can lead either to tissue copper deficiency or overload states. These examples illustrate how impaired regulation of copper transport pathways can cause organ damage and provide important insights into the impact of defects in specific molecular processes, including those catalyzed by the copper-transporting ATPases, ATP7A (mutated in Menkes disease), ATP7B (Wilson's disease), and the copper chaperones such as those for cytochrome c oxidase, SCO1 and SCO2. In diabetes, impaired copper regulation manifests as elevations in urinary CuII excretion, systemic chelatable-CuII and full copper balance, in increased pro-oxidant stress and defective antioxidant defenses, and in progressive damage to the blood vessels, heart, kidneys, retina and nerves. Linkages between dysregulated copper and organ damage can be demonstrated by CuII-selective chelation, which simultaneously prevents/reverses both copper dysregulation and organ damage. Pathogenic structures in blood vessels that contribute to binding and localization of catalytically-active CuII probably include advanced glycation end products (AGEs), as well as atherosclerotic plaque: the latter probably undergoes AGE-modification itself. Defective copper regulation mediates organ damage through two general processes that occur simultaneously in the same individual: elevation of CuII-mediated pro-oxidant stress and impairment of copper-catalyzed antioxidant defence mechanisms. This author has proposed that diabetes-evoked copper dysregulation is an important new target for therapeutic intervention to prevent/reverse organ damage in diabetes, heart failure, and neurodegenerative diseases, and that triethylenetetramine (TETA) is the first in a new class of anti-diabetic molecules, which function by targetting these copper-mediated pathogenic mechanisms. TETA prevents tissue damage and causes organ regeneration by acting as a highly-selective CuII chelator which suppresses copper-mediated oxidative stress and restores anti-oxidant defenses. My group has employed TETA in a comprehensive programme of nonclinical studies and proof-of-principle clinical trials, thereby characterizing copper dysregulation in diabetes and identifying numerous linked cellular and molecular mechanisms though which TETA exerts its therapeutic actions. Many of the results obtained in nonclinical models with respect to the molecular mechanisms of diabetic organ damage have not yet been replicated in patients' tissues so their applicability to the human disease must be considered as inferential until the results of informative clinical studies become available. Based on evidence from the studies reviewed herein, trientine is now proceeding into the later stages of pharmaceutical development for the treatment of heart failure and other diabetic complications.
氧化应激和线粒体功能障碍已被许多研究人员确定为与衰老相关的代谢、心血管和神经退行性疾病(例如糖尿病、心力衰竭和阿尔茨海默病)的关键致病机制。然而,尽管已经提出了许多分子机制来解释这些过程,但它们的确切性质仍然不清楚。作者之前曾提出,在这些疾病中,这两种机制可能是铜调节单一潜在紊乱的表现。铜是一种必需但毒性很强的痕量金属,在生物系统中受到严格调节。人类中已知有几种铜动态平衡的罕见遗传疾病:这些疾病主要影响介导细胞内铜转运过程的各种蛋白质,并可导致组织铜缺乏或过载状态。这些例子说明了铜转运途径调节受损如何导致器官损伤,并为特定分子过程(包括铜转运 ATP 酶催化的过程)缺陷的影响提供了重要的见解,例如铜转运 ATP 酶 ATP7A(Menkes 病中的突变)、ATP7B(Wilson 病)和铜伴侣,如细胞色素 c 氧化酶、SCO1 和 SCO2 的铜伴侣。在糖尿病中,铜调节受损表现为尿 CuII 排泄增加、系统可螯合 CuII 和全铜平衡、促氧化剂应激增加和抗氧化防御缺陷以及血管、心脏、肾脏、视网膜和神经的进行性损伤。铜失调和器官损伤之间的联系可以通过 CuII 选择性螯合来证明,这同时可以预防/逆转铜失调和器官损伤。可能参与结合和定位催化活性 CuII 的血管致病结构包括晚期糖基化终产物 (AGEs) 以及动脉粥样硬化斑块:后者本身可能发生 AGE 修饰。铜调节缺陷通过同时发生在同一个体中的两个一般过程介导器官损伤:CuII 介导的促氧化剂应激升高和铜催化的抗氧化防御机制受损。作者提出,糖尿病引起的铜失调是预防/逆转糖尿病、心力衰竭和神经退行性疾病中器官损伤的一个重要新治疗靶点,三乙烯四胺 (TETA) 是一类新的抗糖尿病分子中的第一个,其通过靶向这些铜介导的致病机制发挥作用。TETA 通过作为高度选择性的 CuII 螯合剂发挥作用,抑制铜介导的氧化应激并恢复抗氧化防御,从而防止组织损伤并导致器官再生。我的小组已经在非临床研究和原理验证临床试验计划中使用了 TETA,从而对糖尿病中的铜失调进行了表征,并确定了 TETA 发挥其治疗作用的许多相关细胞和分子机制。在非临床模型中获得的许多关于糖尿病器官损伤的分子机制的结果尚未在患者组织中得到复制,因此在有信息的临床研究结果可用之前,它们对人类疾病的适用性必须被认为是推论性的。基于本文综述的研究证据,三乙撑四胺现在正在进行心力衰竭和其他糖尿病并发症治疗的药物开发后期阶段。