Bowerman Melissa, Becker Catherina G, Yáñez-Muñoz Rafael J, Ning Ke, Wood Matthew J A, Gillingwater Thomas H, Talbot Kevin
Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QX, UK.
Euan MacDonald Centre for Motor Neurone Disease Research and Centre for Neuroregeneration, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH16 4SB, UK.
Dis Model Mech. 2017 Aug 1;10(8):943-954. doi: 10.1242/dmm.030148.
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a devastating neuromuscular disorder characterized by loss of motor neurons and muscle atrophy, generally presenting in childhood. SMA is caused by low levels of the survival motor neuron protein (SMN) due to inactivating mutations in the encoding gene A second duplicated gene, , produces very little but sufficient functional protein for survival. Therapeutic strategies to increase SMN are in clinical trials, and the first -directed antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) therapy has recently been licensed. However, several factors suggest that complementary strategies may be needed for the long-term maintenance of neuromuscular and other functions in SMA patients. Pre-clinical SMA models demonstrate that the requirement for SMN protein is highest when the structural connections of the neuromuscular system are being established, from late fetal life throughout infancy. Augmenting SMN may not address the slow neurodegenerative process underlying progressive functional decline beyond childhood in less severe types of SMA. Furthermore, individuals receiving SMN-based treatments may be vulnerable to delayed symptoms if rescue of the neuromuscular system is incomplete. Finally, a large number of older patients living with SMA do not fulfill the present criteria for inclusion in gene therapy and ASO clinical trials, and may not benefit from SMN-inducing treatments. Therefore, a comprehensive whole-lifespan approach to SMA therapy is required that includes both SMN-dependent and SMN-independent strategies that treat the CNS and periphery. Here, we review the range of non-SMN pathways implicated in SMA pathophysiology and discuss how various model systems can serve as valuable tools for SMA drug discovery.
脊髓性肌萎缩症(SMA)是一种严重的神经肌肉疾病,其特征为运动神经元丧失和肌肉萎缩,通常在儿童期发病。SMA是由于编码基因的失活突变导致存活运动神经元蛋白(SMN)水平低下所致。另一个重复基因产生的功能性蛋白很少,但足以维持生存。增加SMN的治疗策略正在进行临床试验,首个靶向反义寡核苷酸(ASO)疗法最近已获批准。然而,有几个因素表明,可能需要补充策略来长期维持SMA患者的神经肌肉和其他功能。临床前SMA模型表明,从胎儿晚期到整个婴儿期,在建立神经肌肉系统的结构连接时,对SMN蛋白的需求最高。在不太严重的SMA类型中,增加SMN可能无法解决儿童期后渐进性功能衰退背后的缓慢神经退行性过程。此外,如果神经肌肉系统的挽救不完全,接受基于SMN治疗的个体可能容易出现延迟症状。最后,大量老年SMA患者不符合目前基因治疗和ASO临床试验的纳入标准,可能无法从诱导SMN的治疗中获益。因此,需要一种全面的全生命周期SMA治疗方法,包括治疗中枢神经系统和外周的SMN依赖性和SMN非依赖性策略。在这里,我们综述了与SMA病理生理学相关的非SMN途径的范围,并讨论了各种模型系统如何作为SMA药物发现的有价值工具。