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Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute Discover a Therapeutic Strategy
for "Misfolding Diseases" Analogous to Alzheimer's Disease
La Jolla, CA, September 28, 2001 -- Professor Jeffery W. Kelly, Ph.D., and
his colleagues in the Department of Chemistry and The Skaggs Institute for Chemical
Biology at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have uncovered a potentially
useful strategy to treat the rare disease familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP)
-- an approach that may be generally useful for intervention in other amyloid
diseases.
In the current issue of the journal Science, the team
demonstrates that it is possible to prevent the protein shape changes that cause
FAP, a disease that is analogous to Alzheimer's. The strategy is to introduce
another protein that interacts with the protein capable of aberrant shape changes,
preventing them.
"I'm very excited about pursuing these potential therapeutic
opportunities," says Kelly.
Amyloid-forming diseases like FAP are generally characterized
by the formation of microscopic fibrils made up of hundreds of misfolded proteins
that cluster together and deposit in organs, interfering with their normal function.
FAP, a rare amyloid disease, is caused by the misfolding of
the protein transthyretin (TTR), which is secreted by the liver into the bloodstream
to carry thyroid hormone and vitamin A. Normally, TTR circulates in the blood
as an active "tetramer" made up of four separate copies, or protein subunits,
that bind to each other.
These subunits come from two different genes on two different
chromosomes. The resulting tetramers are composed of identical protein subunits
when the genes are identical.
However, when one of the copies has a heritable defect, hybrid
tetramers form that are composed of mutant and normal subunits. The inclusion
of mutated subunits makes the tetramer less stable and causes the four subunits
to dissociate under conditions where they are not supposed to. Once the subunits
are free, they can misfold and reassemble into the hair-like amyloid fibrils.
These fibrils cause the disease FAP by building up around peripheral
nerve and muscle tissue, disrupting their function and leading to numbness and
muscle weakness, and -- in advanced cases -- failure of the gastrointestinal
tract. The current treatment for FAP is a liver transplant, which replaces the
mutant gene with a normal copy.
Kelly and his colleagues discovered that a "suppressor" TTR
subunit incorporated into a TTR tetramer with disease-associated destabilizing
subunits prevents the tetramer from dissociating into potential fibril-forming
monomers. Significantly, they found that incorporating even one of the suppressor
subunit into a tetramer where the remainder of the subunits have disease-associated
mutations doubles its stability. "The suppressor protein subunits prevent misfolding
by preventing dissociation," says Kelly.
This "trans" suppression approach may form the basis for a
new therapy for FAP, in which a patient could receive an injection of the suppressor
protein. The idea may also work with other diseases where the protein normally
engages in protein–protein interactions. When gene therapy becomes practical,
one may be able to introduce the suppressor gene directly into the organ that
makes the aberrant protein. The protective subunit will therefore be incorporated
during biosynthesis, thus preventing later misfolding.
The research article, "Trans-Suppression of Misfolding
in an Amyloid Disease" is authored by Per Hammarstrom, Frank Schneider, and Jeffery
W. Kelly and appears in the September 28, 2001 issue of the journal Science.
The research was funded in part by the National Institutes
of Health, The Skaggs Institute for Research and the Lita Annenberg Hazen Foundation.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2001 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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