Division of Clinical Neurology, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Brain. 2013 Jan;136(Pt 1):106-15. doi: 10.1093/brain/aws325.
Neurodegeneration is the main cause for permanent disability in multiple sclerosis. The effect of current immunomodulatory treatments on neurodegeneration is insufficient. Therefore, direct neuroprotection and myeloprotection remain an important therapeutic goal. Targeting acid-sensing ion channel 1 (encoded by the ASIC1 gene), which contributes to the excessive intracellular accumulation of injurious Na(+) and Ca(2+) and is over-expressed in acute multiple sclerosis lesions, appears to be a viable strategy to limit cellular injury that is the substrate of neurodegeneration. While blockade of ASIC1 through amiloride, a potassium sparing diuretic that is currently licensed for hypertension and congestive cardiac failure, showed neuroprotective and myeloprotective effects in experimental models of multiple sclerosis, this strategy remains untested in patients with multiple sclerosis. In this translational study, we tested the neuroprotective effects of amiloride in patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis. First, we assessed ASIC1 expression in chronic brain lesions from post-mortem of patients with progressive multiple sclerosis to identify the target process for neuroprotection. Second, we tested the neuroprotective effect of amiloride in a cohort of 14 patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis using magnetic resonance imaging markers of neurodegeneration as outcome measures of neuroprotection. Patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis underwent serial magnetic resonance imaging scans before (pretreatment phase) and during (treatment phase) amiloride treatment for a period of 3 years. Whole-brain volume and tissue integrity were measured with high-resolution T(1)-weighted and diffusion tensor imaging. In chronic brain lesions of patients with progressive multiple sclerosis, we demonstrate an increased expression of ASIC1 in axons and an association with injury markers within chronic inactive lesions. In patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis, we observed a significant reduction in normalized annual rate of whole-brain volume during the treatment phase, compared with the pretreatment phase (P = 0.018, corrected). Consistent with this reduction, we showed that changes in diffusion indices of tissue damage within major clinically relevant white matter (corpus callosum and corticospinal tract) and deep grey matter (thalamus) structures were significantly reduced during the treatment phase (P = 0.02, corrected). Our results extend evidence of the contribution of ASIC1 to neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis and suggest that amiloride may exert neuroprotective effects in patients with progressive multiple sclerosis. This pilot study is the first translational study on neuroprotection targeting ASIC1 and supports future randomized controlled trials measuring neuroprotection with amiloride in patients with multiple sclerosis.
神经退行性变是多发性硬化症导致永久性残疾的主要原因。目前免疫调节治疗对神经退行性变的作用不足。因此,直接的神经保护和骨髓保护仍然是一个重要的治疗目标。靶向酸感应离子通道 1(由 ASIC1 基因编码),该通道有助于细胞内有害的 Na(+)和 Ca(2+)的过度积累,并且在急性多发性硬化症病变中过度表达,似乎是限制神经退行性变基础的细胞损伤的可行策略。虽然通过阿米洛利(一种目前被批准用于高血压和充血性心力衰竭的保钾利尿剂)阻断 ASIC1 在多发性硬化症的实验模型中显示出神经保护和骨髓保护作用,但该策略尚未在多发性硬化症患者中进行测试。在这项转化研究中,我们测试了阿米洛利在原发性进展性多发性硬化症患者中的神经保护作用。首先,我们评估了进展性多发性硬化症患者死后慢性脑病变中 ASIC1 的表达,以确定神经保护的靶标过程。其次,我们使用磁共振成像标记物作为神经保护的结果测量指标,在 14 例原发性进展性多发性硬化症患者中测试了阿米洛利的神经保护作用。原发性进展性多发性硬化症患者在接受阿米洛利治疗前(预处理阶段)和治疗期间(治疗阶段)进行了连续磁共振成像扫描,为期 3 年。采用高分辨率 T1 加权和弥散张量成像测量全脑容积和组织完整性。在进展性多发性硬化症患者的慢性脑病变中,我们证明了 ASIC1 在轴突中的表达增加,并与慢性非活动病变中的损伤标志物相关。在原发性进展性多发性硬化症患者中,我们观察到治疗阶段与预处理阶段相比,全脑容积的归一化年增长率显著降低(P = 0.018,校正)。与这种减少一致,我们表明,在主要的临床相关白质(胼胝体和皮质脊髓束)和深部灰质(丘脑)结构内的组织损伤的弥散指数变化在治疗阶段显著降低(P = 0.02,校正)。我们的结果扩展了 ASIC1 对多发性硬化症神经退行性变的贡献的证据,并表明阿米洛利可能对进展性多发性硬化症患者发挥神经保护作用。这项初步研究是针对 ASIC1 的神经保护的首个转化研究,支持未来使用阿米洛利在多发性硬化症患者中进行神经保护的随机对照试验。