Department of Biotechnology, Chemistry, and Pharmacy, University of Siena, Via A. Moro 2, 53100 Siena, Italy.
J Inherit Metab Dis. 2019 Jan;42(1):178-185. doi: 10.1002/jimd.12039.
Lesch-Nyhan disease (LND) is a rare X-linked genetic disorder, with complete hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) deficiency, uric acid (UA), hypoxanthine and xanthine accumulation, and a devastating neurologic syndrome. UA excess, causing renal failure, is commonly decreased by xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) inhibitors, such as allopurinol, yielding a xanthine and hypoxanthine increase. Xanthine accumulation may result in renal stones, while hypoxanthine excess seems involved in the neurological disorder. Inhibition of purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) represents a different strategy for lowering urate. PNP catalyzes the cleavage of purine ribo- and d-ribo-nucleosides into ribose/deoxyribose phosphate and free bases, starting catabolism to uric acid. Clinical trials demonstrated that PNP inhibitors, initially developed as anticancer drugs, lowered UA in some gouty patients, in association or not with allopurinol. The present study tested the reliability of an analogue of immucillin-G (C1a), a PNP inhibitor, as a therapy for urate, hypoxanthine, and xanthine excess in LND patients by blocking hypoxanthine production upstream. The therapeutic aim is to limit the administration of XOR inhibitors to LND patients by supplying the PNP inhibitor in low doses, avoiding d-nucleoside toxicity. We report studies conducted in primary cultures of skin fibroblasts from controls and LND patients grown in the presence of the PNP inhibitor. Cell viability, oxypurine release in culture medium, and endocellular nucleotide pattern have been monitored in different growth conditions (inhibitor concentration, time, added inosine). Our results demonstrate effective PNP inhibition by low inhibitor concentration, with reduced hypoxanthine release, and no appreciable toxicity in control or patient cells, suggesting a new therapeutic strategy for LND hyperuricemia.
莱施-尼汉病(Lesch-Nyhan disease,LND)是一种罕见的 X 连锁遗传疾病,完全缺乏次黄嘌呤-鸟嘌呤磷酸核糖转移酶(hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase,HGPRT),导致尿酸(uric acid,UA)、次黄嘌呤和黄嘌呤蓄积,并伴有毁灭性的神经综合征。UA 过量会导致肾衰竭,通常可通过黄嘌呤氧化还原酶(xanthine oxidoreductase,XOR)抑制剂如别嘌呤醇降低,从而导致黄嘌呤和次黄嘌呤增加。黄嘌呤蓄积可能导致肾结石,而次黄嘌呤过量似乎与神经紊乱有关。嘌呤核苷磷酸化酶(purine nucleoside phosphorylase,PNP)抑制剂代表了降低尿酸的另一种策略。PNP 催化嘌呤核糖核苷和脱氧核糖核苷裂解为核糖/脱氧核糖磷酸盐和游离碱基,开始嘌呤代谢为尿酸。临床试验表明,最初作为抗癌药物开发的 PNP 抑制剂可降低一些痛风患者的 UA 水平,无论是否与别嘌呤醇联合使用。本研究通过阻断次黄嘌呤的上游产生,测试了一种免疫菌素-G(immucillin-G,C1a)类似物作为 LND 患者尿酸、次黄嘌呤和黄嘌呤过量治疗药物的可靠性。治疗目标是通过低剂量供应 PNP 抑制剂,避免 d-核苷毒性,限制 XOR 抑制剂在 LND 患者中的应用。我们报告了在存在 PNP 抑制剂的情况下,对来自对照和 LND 患者的皮肤成纤维细胞原代培养物进行的研究。在不同的生长条件下(抑制剂浓度、时间、添加肌苷)监测细胞活力、培养上清液中的氧嘌呤释放和细胞内核苷酸模式。我们的结果表明,低浓度抑制剂即可有效抑制 PNP,减少次黄嘌呤释放,且对对照或患者细胞无明显毒性,为 LND 高尿酸血症提供了一种新的治疗策略。