| Literature DB >> 24248060 |
Abstract
Psychotropics (antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, antidepressants, anxiolytics, etc.) are commonly prescribed to treat Huntington's disease (HD). In HD preclinical models, while no psychotropic has convincingly affected huntingtin gene, HD modifying gene, or huntingtin protein expression, psychotropic neuroprotective effects include upregulated huntingtin autophagy (lithium), histone acetylation (lithium, valproate, lamotrigine), miR-222 (lithium-plus-valproate), mitochondrial protection (haloperidol, trifluoperazine, imipramine, desipramine, nortriptyline, maprotiline, trazodone, sertraline, venlafaxine, melatonin), neurogenesis (lithium, valproate, fluoxetine, sertraline), and BDNF (lithium, valproate, sertraline) and downregulated AP-1 DNA binding (lithium), p53 (lithium), huntingtin aggregation (antipsychotics, lithium), and apoptosis (trifluoperazine, loxapine, lithium, desipramine, nortriptyline, maprotiline, cyproheptadine, melatonin). In HD live mouse models, delayed disease onset (nortriptyline, melatonin), striatal preservation (haloperidol, tetrabenazine, lithium, sertraline), memory preservation (imipramine, trazodone, fluoxetine, sertraline, venlafaxine), motor improvement (tetrabenazine, lithium, valproate, imipramine, nortriptyline, trazodone, sertraline, venlafaxine), and extended survival (lithium, valproate, sertraline, melatonin) have been documented. Upregulated CREB binding protein (CBP; valproate, dextromethorphan) and downregulated histone deacetylase (HDAC; valproate) await demonstration in HD models. Most preclinical findings await replication and their limitations are reviewed. The most promising findings involve replicated striatal neuroprotection and phenotypic disease modification in transgenic mice for tetrabenazine and for sertraline. Clinical data consist of an uncontrolled lithium case series (n = 3) suggesting non-progression and a primarily negative double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of lamotrigine.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24248060 PMCID: PMC3856079 DOI: 10.3390/ijms141122558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Psychotropic classes and drugs investigated.
| Psychotropic classes | Drugs investigated | |
|---|---|---|
| Chlorpromazine | ||
| Aripiprazole | ||
| Pimavanserin | ||
| Tetrabenazine | ||
| Carbamazepine | ||
| Lithium | ||
| Dextromethorphan/quinidine | ||
| Amitriptyline | ||
| Maprotiline | ||
| Citalopram, Escitalopram | ||
| Duloxetine | ||
| Bupropion | ||
| Cyproheptadine | ||
| Alprazolam | ||
| Buspirone | ||
| See anxiolytics above | ||
| Zaleplon | ||
| See anxiolytics above | ||
| Melatonin | ||
| Modafinil, Armodafinil | ||
| Amantadine | ||
Epigenetic targets in Huntington’s Disease.
| Process | Epigenetic targets | |
|---|---|---|
| DNA methylation, especially in low CpG content regions [ | ||
| Transcriptional regulator FRA-2 in low CpG content regions [ | ||
| Chromatin unpacking into a de-repressed unpacked configuration [ | ||
| Mono-ubiquitylation of histone H2A [ | ||
| Posttranscriptional RNA editing of glutamate receptor GluR-2 [ | ||
| miR-135b [ | ||
| miR-29a [ | ||
| miR-9 [ | ||
| miR-30a [ | ||
Epigenetic targets based on data obtained in Huntington’s disease models, including some targets awaiting replication and establishment. Some of the targets may represent epiphenomena unrelated to HD pathogenesis.
Psychotropic effects on Histone Deacetylases (HDACs).
| EFFECT | HDAC1 | HDAC2 | HDAC3 | HDAC4 | HDAC5 | HDAC6 | HDAC11 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbamazepine | [ | ||||||
| Valproate | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Amitriptyline | [ | [ | |||||
| Clozapine | [ | [ | |||||
| Olanzapine | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Lurasidone | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Carbamazepine | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Valproate | [ | [ | |||||
| Lamotrigine | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Clomipramine | [ | [ | |||||
| Fluoxetine | [ | ||||||
| Escitalopram | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Duloxetine | [ | [ | [ | ||||
| Mirtazapine | [ | [ | [ |
Psychotropic downregulating and upregulating effects on histone deacetylases 1–6 and 11 or their function, demonstrated in non-HD models and awaiting confirmation in Huntington’s disease models.
Criteria for determining candidate agents for clinical trials in HD.
| Evidence type | Neuroprotective candidate attribute |
|---|---|
|
Experimental evidence of a neuroprotective action using an established neuroprotective model at physiological drug doses Independent replication of the neuroprotective action in the same model and at the same dose Replication of the neuroprotective action in at least one other model at a physiological dose Replication of the neuroprotective action in neural tissue, preferably mature neurons or glia, at a physiological dose Independent replication of the neuroprotective action in the specified neural tissue at the same site and in the same animal at the same dose (e.g., replication of a rat striatal neuron finding in a rat striatal neuron model, rather than in rat cerebellar granule cells) Evidence in an accepted animal model for HD (e.g., transgenic mice, quinolinate rat model, Evidence of A greater overall neuroprotective positive “valence” (the number of neuroprotective actions minus the number of neurodegenerative actions demonstrated for the agent of interest [e.g., an agent with 3 distinct neuroprotective actions and 1 neurodegenerative action might be assigned a positive valence of 3 − 1 = 2 (recognizing at the present time that different actions may someday be demonstrated to have differentially weighted correlation coefficients with neurodegenerative progression)]) | |
|
Clinical evidence suggestive of delayed progression (e.g., lack of progression in chorea and dementia over 5 years, lack of deterioration in UHDRS TFC score after 5 years in a patient rigorously diagnosed for HD, absence of change in MRI caudate volume over 5 years in a patient rigorously diagnosed for HD, Evidence of a more benign disease course than expected for patients in a case series or clinical trial (particularly if symptomatic effects of the drug can be controlled for) |
These are putative criteria for assessing the probability that an agent will demonstrate a translational neuroprotective effect in an HD clinical trial. Since the predictive utility of these factors remains to be demonstrated, an equal weighting may be assigned to each criterion. It is likely that the more criteria an agent meets, the greater the likelihood that it will yield significant results in a clinical neuroprotective trial in HD. Abbreviations: HD Huntington’s Disease; μM micromolar; mg milligram; ml milliliter; mM millimolar; MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination; MRI magnetic resonance imaging; TFC Total Functional Capacity; UHDRS Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (adapted from Lauterbach et al. [13]).
Antipsychotic and tetrabenazine neuroprotective effects in Huntington’s disease models.
| Neuroprotective action | D2 antagonist antipsychotics | Trifluoperazine | Haloperidol | Loxapine | Tetrabenazine |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huntingtin clearance | + | + | |||
| AP-1 DNA binding | |||||
| Histone acetylation | |||||
| p53 | |||||
| MiR-222 | |||||
| Mitochondria | + | + | + | ||
| Apoptosis | + | + | |||
| Neurogenesis | |||||
| BDNF | |||||
| Striatal preservation | + | + | |||
| Cognitive integrity | |||||
| Motor integrity | + | ||||
| Delay of disease onset | |||||
| Enhanced survival |
Mood stabilizer neuroprotective effects in Huntington’s disease models.
| Neuroprotective action | Lithium | Valproate | Lamotrigine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Huntingtin clearance by autophagy | + | ||
| AP-1 DNA binding | + | ||
| Histone acetylation | + | + | + |
| p53 | + | ||
| MiR-222 | +? (when combined with valproate) | +? (when combined with lithium) | |
| Mitochondria | |||
| Apoptosis | + | ||
| Neurogenesis | + | ||
| BDNF | + | + | |
| Striatal preservation | + | ||
| Cognitive integrity | |||
| Motor integrity | + | + | |
| Delay of disease onset | |||
| Enhanced survival | + | + |
Tricyclic and tetracyclic antidepressant neuroprotective effects in Huntington’s disease models.
| Neuroprotective action | Imipramine | Desipramine | Nortriptyline | Maprotiline |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huntingtin clearance | ||||
| AP-1 DNA binding | ||||
| Histone acetylation | ||||
| p53 | ||||
| MiR-222 | ||||
| Mitochondria | + | + | + | + |
| Apoptosis | + | + | + | |
| Neurogenesis | ||||
| BDNF | ||||
| Striatal preservation | ||||
| Cognitive integrity | + | |||
| Motor integrity | + | + | ||
| Delay of disease onset | + | |||
| Enhanced survival |
Other antidepressant neuroprotective effects in Huntington’s disease models.
| Neuroprotective action | Trazodone | Fluoxetine | Sertraline | Venlafaxine |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huntingtin clearance | ||||
| AP-1 DNA binding | ||||
| Histone acetylation | ||||
| p53 | ||||
| MiR-222 | ||||
| Mitochondria | + | + | + | |
| Apoptosis | ||||
| Neurogenesis | + | + | ||
| BDNF | + | |||
| Striatal preservation | + | |||
| Cognitive integrity | + | + | + | + |
| Motor integrity | + | + | + | |
| Delay of disease onset | ||||
| Enhanced survival | + |
Anxiolytic and hypnotic neuroprotective effects in Huntington’s disease models.
| Neuroprotective action | Cyproheptadine | Melatonin |
|---|---|---|
| Huntingtin clearance | ||
| AP-1 DNA binding | ||
| Histone acetylation | ||
| p53 | ||
| MiR-222 | ||
| Mitochondria | + | |
| Apoptosis | + | + |
| Neurogenesis | ||
| BDNF | ||
| Striatal preservation | ||
| Cognitive integrity | ||
| Motor integrity | ||
| Delay of disease onset | + | |
| Enhanced survival | + |