School of Public Health, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, 1/F, Patrick Manson Building (North Wing), 7 Sassoon Road, Hong Kong, China.
School of Public Health, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, 1/F, Patrick Manson Building (North Wing), 7 Sassoon Road, Hong Kong, China; City University of New York, Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, New York, United States.
EBioMedicine. 2018 Nov;37:461-470. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2018.10.001. Epub 2018 Oct 9.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating condition with no known effective drug treatments. Existing drugs only alleviate symptoms. Given repeated expensive drug failures, we assessed systematically whether approved and investigational AD drugs are targeting products of genes strongly associated with AD and whether these genes are targeted by existing drugs for other indications which could be re-purposed.
We identified genes strongly associated with late-onset AD from the loci of genetic variants associated with AD at genome-wide-significance and from a gene-based test applied to the most extensively genotyped late-onset AD case (n = 17,008)-control ( = 37,154) study, the International Genomics of Alzheimer's Project. We used three gene-to-drug cross-references, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes, Drugbank and Drug Repurposing Hub, to identify genetically validated targets of AD drugs and any existing drugs or nutraceuticals targeting products of the genes strongly associated with late-onset AD.
A total of 67 autosomal genes (forming 9 gene clusters) were identified as strongly associated with late-onset AD, 28 from the loci of single genetic variants, 51 from the gene-based test and 12 by both methods. Existing approved or investigational AD drugs did not target products of any of these 67 genes. Drugs for other indications targeted 11 of these genes, including immunosuppressive disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs targeting gene products.
Approved and investigational AD drugs are not targeting products of genes strongly associated with late-onset AD. However, other drugs targeting products of these genes exist and could perhaps be re-purposing to combat late-onset AD after further scrutiny.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种破坏性疾病,目前尚无已知有效的药物治疗方法。现有的药物只能缓解症状。鉴于反复昂贵的药物失败,我们系统地评估了批准和研究中的 AD 药物是否针对与 AD 强烈相关的基因产物,以及这些基因是否被针对其他适应症的现有药物靶向,这些药物可能被重新用于治疗 AD。
我们从与 AD 相关的全基因组显著遗传变异的基因座和针对最广泛基因分型的迟发性 AD 病例(n=17008)-对照(n=37154)研究,即国际阿尔茨海默病基因组学项目中的基因进行的基于基因的测试中,确定了与迟发性 AD 强烈相关的基因。我们使用三种基因到药物交叉参考,京都基因与基因组百科全书,Drugbank 和药物再利用中心,来识别 AD 药物的遗传验证靶点,以及任何针对与迟发性 AD 强烈相关的基因产物的现有药物或营养药物。
共有 67 个常染色体基因(形成 9 个基因簇)被确定为与迟发性 AD 强烈相关,其中 28 个来自单遗传变异的基因座,51 个来自基于基因的测试,12 个来自两种方法。现有的批准或研究中的 AD 药物并不针对这些 67 个基因中的任何一个的产物。针对其他适应症的药物靶向了其中的 11 个基因,包括靶向基因产物的免疫抑制性疾病修饰抗风湿药物。
批准和研究中的 AD 药物并未针对与迟发性 AD 强烈相关的基因产物。然而,存在针对这些基因产物的其他药物,并且在经过进一步审查后,这些药物可能被重新用于治疗迟发性 AD。