Stewart Tracy R Murray, Foley Jackson R, Holbert Cassandra E, Khomutov Maxim A, Rastkari Noushin, Tao Xianzun, Khomutov Alex R, Zhai Rong Grace, Casero Robert A
bioRxiv. 2023 Apr 10:2023.03.30.534977. doi: 10.1101/2023.03.30.534977.
Snyder-Robinson Syndrome (SRS) is caused by mutations in the spermine synthase (SMS) gene, the enzyme product of which converts the polyamine spermidine into spermine. Affecting primarily males, common manifestations of SRS include intellectual disability, osteoporosis, hypotonic musculature, and seizures, along with other more variable symptoms. Currently, medical management focuses on treating these symptoms without addressing the underlying molecular cause of the disease. Reduced SMS catalytic activity in cells of SRS patients causes the accumulation of spermidine, while spermine levels are reduced. The resulting exaggeration in spermidine-to-spermine ratio is a biochemical hallmark of SRS that tends to correlate with symptom severity in the patient. Our studies aim to pharmacologically manipulate polyamine metabolism to correct this polyamine imbalance and investigate the potential of this approach as a therapeutic strategy for affected individuals. Here we report the use of difluoromethylornithine (DFMO; eflornithine), an FDA-approved inhibitor of polyamine biosynthesis, in re-establishing normal spermidine-to-spermine ratios in SRS patient cells. Through mechanistic studies, we demonstrate that, while reducing spermidine biosynthesis, DFMO also stimulates the conversion of existing spermidine into spermine in cell lines with hypomorphic variants of SMS. Further, DFMO treatment induces a compensatory uptake of exogenous polyamines, including spermine and spermine mimetics, cooperatively reducing spermidine and increasing spermine levels. In a Drosophila SRS model characterized by reduced lifespan, adding DFMO to the feed extended lifespan. As nearly all known SRS patient mutations are hypomorphic, these studies form a foundation for future translational studies with significant therapeutic potential.
斯奈德-罗宾逊综合征(SRS)由精胺合酶(SMS)基因突变引起,该酶可将多胺亚精胺转化为精胺。SRS主要影响男性,常见表现包括智力残疾、骨质疏松、肌张力减退和癫痫发作,以及其他更多可变症状。目前,医学治疗主要集中于治疗这些症状,而未解决该疾病的潜在分子病因。SRS患者细胞中SMS催化活性降低导致亚精胺积累,而精胺水平降低。由此导致的亚精胺与精胺比例失衡是SRS的生化特征,且往往与患者症状严重程度相关。我们的研究旨在通过药理学手段调控多胺代谢以纠正这种多胺失衡,并研究该方法作为受影响个体治疗策略的潜力。在此,我们报告使用经美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)批准的多胺生物合成抑制剂二氟甲基鸟氨酸(DFMO;依氟鸟氨酸),在SRS患者细胞中重新建立正常的亚精胺与精胺比例。通过机制研究我们证明,在降低亚精胺生物合成的同时,DFMO还能刺激SMS低表达变体的细胞系中现有亚精胺转化为精胺。此外,DFMO处理可诱导对外源多胺(包括精胺和精胺模拟物)的代偿性摄取,协同降低亚精胺并提高精胺水平。在以寿命缩短为特征的果蝇SRS模型中,在饲料中添加DFMO可延长寿命。由于几乎所有已知的SRS患者突变都是低表达的,这些研究为未来具有重大治疗潜力的转化研究奠定了基础。