Wang Liqun, Hagemann Tracy L, Messing Albee, Feany Mel B
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, and.
Waisman Center, and Department of Comparative Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53705.
J Neurosci. 2016 Feb 3;36(5):1445-55. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0256-15.2016.
The role that glia play in neurological disease is poorly understood but increasingly acknowledged to be critical in a diverse group of disorders. Here we use a simple genetic model of Alexander disease, a progressive and severe human degenerative nervous system disease caused by a primary astroglial abnormality, to perform an in vivo screen of 1987 compounds, including many FDA-approved drugs and natural products. We identify four compounds capable of dose-dependent inhibition of nervous system toxicity. Focusing on one of these hits, glycopyrrolate, we confirm the role for muscarinic cholinergic signaling in pathogenesis using additional pharmacologic reagents and genetic approaches. We further demonstrate that muscarinic cholinergic signaling works through downstream Gαq to control oxidative stress and death of neurons and glia. Importantly, we document increased muscarinic cholinergic receptor expression in Alexander disease model mice and in postmortem brain tissue from Alexander disease patients, and that blocking muscarinic receptors in Alexander disease model mice reduces oxidative stress, emphasizing the translational significance of our findings. We have therefore identified glial muscarinic signaling as a potential therapeutic target in Alexander disease, and possibly in other gliopathic disorders as well.
Despite the urgent need for better treatments for neurological diseases, drug development for these devastating disorders has been challenging. The effectiveness of traditional large-scale in vitro screens may be limited by the lack of the appropriate molecular, cellular, and structural environment. Using a simple Drosophila model of Alexander disease, we performed a moderate throughput chemical screen of FDA-approved drugs and natural compounds, and found that reducing muscarinic cholinergic signaling ameliorated clinical symptoms and oxidative stress in Alexander disease model flies and mice. Our work demonstrates that small animal models are valuable screening tools for therapeutic compound identification in complex human diseases and that existing drugs can be a valuable resource for drug discovery given their known pharmacological and safety profiles.
神经胶质细胞在神经疾病中所起的作用目前了解甚少,但人们越来越认识到它在多种疾病中至关重要。在此,我们利用亚历山大病的一个简单遗传模型开展研究,亚历山大病是一种由原发性星形胶质细胞异常引起的进行性严重人类退行性神经系统疾病,我们对1987种化合物进行了体内筛选,其中包括许多经美国食品药品监督管理局批准的药物和天然产物。我们鉴定出四种能够剂量依赖性抑制神经系统毒性的化合物。聚焦于其中一种命中化合物格隆溴铵,我们使用额外的药理学试剂和遗传学方法证实了毒蕈碱胆碱能信号在发病机制中的作用。我们进一步证明,毒蕈碱胆碱能信号通过下游Gαq起作用,以控制神经元和神经胶质细胞的氧化应激及死亡。重要的是,我们记录到亚历山大病模型小鼠以及亚历山大病患者的尸检脑组织中毒蕈碱胆碱能受体表达增加,并且在亚历山大病模型小鼠中阻断毒蕈碱受体会降低氧化应激,这突出了我们研究结果的转化意义。因此,我们已确定神经胶质细胞毒蕈碱信号传导是亚历山大病以及可能其他胶质细胞病的一个潜在治疗靶点。
尽管迫切需要更好的神经疾病治疗方法,但针对这些毁灭性疾病的药物研发一直具有挑战性。传统大规模体外筛选的有效性可能因缺乏合适的分子、细胞和结构环境而受到限制。利用亚历山大病的一个简单果蝇模型,我们对经美国食品药品监督管理局批准的药物和天然化合物进行了中等通量化学筛选,发现减少毒蕈碱胆碱能信号可改善亚历山大病模型果蝇和小鼠的临床症状及氧化应激。我们的工作表明,小动物模型是在复杂人类疾病中鉴定治疗性化合物的有价值筛选工具,并且鉴于现有药物已知的药理学和安全性概况,它们可成为药物发现的宝贵资源。