Two small molecules that can be effective in treating the inherited metabolic disorder, Schindler/Kanzaki disease, have been identified by researchers at University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Two small molecules that can be effective in treating the inherited metabolic disorder, Schindler/Kanzaki disease, have been identified by researchers at University of Massachusetts Amherst, who hope that their findings could lead to development of a drug for treating the disease. Findings are reported in the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. First author Nathaniel Clark conducted this work for his doctoral degree at UMass Amherst with his advisor, biochemist Scott Garman, plus others at UMass Amherst and at Oxford University, U.K. The work was supported by the NIH's National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS).
Schindler/Kanzaki is one in a family of more than 50 very rare lysosomal storage diseases that together affect about 7,000 to 8,000 births per year, with no cure at present and few treatment options.
Babies born with it have a faulty copy of a single gene that codes for the alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase (alpha-NAGAL) enzyme, one of the cell's "recycling" machines that clean up used, toxic molecules, or substrate. When it works normally, alpha-NAGAL breaks down a sugar-containing substrate in the cell's recycling center, the lysosome. If alpha-NAGAL underperforms or fails, patients have neuromuscular problems such as seizures and muscle weakness. Garman says, "Some substrates are very toxic and children born with these diseases are really, really sick, many only living a short time."
The faulty gene causes its damage by misfolding proteins, yielding an unstable, poorly functioning alpha-NAGAL enzyme. One route to treat the disease is to stabilize alpha-NAGAL by using small molecules as so-called "pharmacological chaperones." The two molecules two Garman and colleagues identified and tested keep the alpha-NAGAL enzyme on track to proper folding.
In their paper, the UMass Amherst researchers show how these chaperones, sugar mimics (iminosugars) DGJ and DGJNAc, stabilize the defective alpha-NAGAL enzyme. Further, Clark, Garman and colleagues for the first time demonstrate by biochemical, crystallographic and cellular experiments exactly how the small molecule binds to the enzyme and provides that stability.
"People had hypothesized that this approach, using DGJNAc to treat Schindler disease, would work," Garman says. "Now we have shown for the first time that it does. These experiments show we can add DGJNAc to cells and increase the amount of the Schindler enzyme. As the culmination of Nat Clark's PhD thesis, it's a great achievement for him. We were the first to discover the enzyme's structure in 2009, and now we've discovered the small molecules that bind and stabilize that enzyme."
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The biochemists hope this work, which outlines how the chaperones could be used in treatment, may lead to their approval for compassionate use as an experimental drug. DGJ has already been found safe in humans and is now in Phase III clinical trials for Fabry disease, another lysosomal storage disorder. Thanks to this work it and DGJNAc might be useful in treating patients with Schindler disease.
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Source-Eurekalert