| Literature DB >> 25071843 |
Abstract
Available treatments for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Huntington's disease, do not arrest disease progression but mainly help keeping patients from getting worse for a limited period of time. Increasing evidence suggests that epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation and histone tail modifications are dynamically regulated in neurons and play a fundamental role in learning and memory processes. In addition, both global and gene-specific epigenetic changes and deregulated expression of the writer and eraser proteins of epigenetic marks are believed to contribute to the onset and progression of neurodegeneration. Studies in animal models of neurodegenerative diseases have highlighted the potential role of epigenetic drugs, including inhibitors of histone deacetylases and methyl donor compounds, in ameliorating the cognitive symptoms and preventing or delaying the motor symptoms of the disease, thereby opening the way for a potential application in human pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; DNA methylation; Huntington's disease; Parkinson's disease; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi); histone tail modifications; therapeutic approaches
Year: 2014 PMID: 25071843 PMCID: PMC4094885 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2014.00220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Mammalian histone deacetylase (HDAC) proteins and some of their inhibitors (HDACi).
| Class I (Zinc dependent) | HDAC 1/nucleus/Ce, Ob, A, Hi, Co, Ch, P, Sc, Hy, Sn-c, Sn-r, M, Na, Cp | Pan-inhibitors: trichostatin A, vorinostat, butyrate, phenylbutyrate, valproate |
| Involved in: regulation of gene-specific transcription through the formation of stable transcriptional complexes | HDAC 2/nucleus/Hi, Ce, Ob, Co, A, CP, Na, P, Sc, Sn-c, Hy, M, Sn-r | Selective inhibitors: MS-275 (HDAC1), 4b (HDAC1 and 3) |
| HDAC 3/shuttle between nucleus and cytoplasm/Hi, Ce, Ob, Co, A, Sn-c, Hy, Cp, Na, Ch, M, Sc, P, Sn-r, Gp | ||
| HDAC 8/nucleus / Hi, Ce, Ob, A, Sn-c, Co, Hy, P, M, Sc | ||
| Class IIa (Zinc dependent) | HDAC 4/nucleus-cytoplasm/Ce, Hi, Ob, Co, A, Sn-c, Hy, P, M, Sc, Sn-r, Na, Cp, Gp | Pan-inhibitors: trichostatin A, vorinostat, butyrate, phenylbutyrate, valproate |
| Shuttle between nucleus and cytoplasm to interact with both nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins, have histone deacetylase activity by interacting with HDAC3 | HDAC 5/nucleus-cytoplasm/Ce, Hi, Ob, Co, Sn-c, Hy, Cp, Na, A, P, M, Sc, Ch, Sn-r, Gp | |
| HDAC 7/nucleus-cytoplasm/Ce, Hi, Ob, A, Sn-c, Co, Cp, Na, Hy, P, M, Sc | ||
| HDAC 9/nucleus-cytoplasm/Hi, Sn-c, Ob, Co, A, P, Ce | ||
| Class IIb (Zinc dependent) | HDAC 6/cytoplasm/Hi, Ob, Ce, Co, A, Sn-c, Hy, P, Cp, Na, M, Sc | Pan-inhibitors: Trichostatin A, vorinostat |
| HDAC6: take part in the microtubule network by acting on α-tubulin and tau proteins, and plays a fundamental role in the formation of protein aggregates; HDAC10: cytoplasmic deacetylase | HDAC 10/cytoplasm/Hi, Ob, Ce, A | |
| Class III (nicotinamide dependent) | Sirtuin (SIRT) 1 and 6/nucleus/(SIRT 1) Co, Hi, Ce, Hy, Sc | Pan-inhibitor: nicotinamide |
| SIRT 1-3 have robust deacetylase activity; SIRT4 is an ADP-ribosyltransferase; SIRT 5 has deacetylase and other activities; SIRT 6 has ADP-ribosyl transferase and deacetylase activities; SIRT 7 is a deacetylase | SIRT 2/cytosol | Selective inhibitors: AK-1, AGK-2, AK-7 (sirtuin 2) |
| SIRT 3, 4, 5/mitochondria | ||
| SIRT 7/nucleolus | ||
| Class IV (Zinc dependent) | HDAC 11/nucleus/Hy, A, Ob, P, Co, Cp, Na, Hi, Sn-c, Sc, M, Sn-r, Gp | LAQ824 |
| Member of the survival of motor neuron complex, has a functional role in mRNA splicing |
Expression levels are obtained from studies in brain regions of rodents (Broide et al., 2007; Zakhary et al., 2010) and ordered from high expression (first) to low expression (latter). A, amygdala; Ce, cerebellum; Ch, choroid plexus; Co, cortex; Cp, caudate putamen; Gp, globus pallidus; Hi, hippocampus; Hy, hypothalamus; Na, nucleus accumbens; M, medulla; Ob, olfactory bulb; P, pons; Sc, spinal cord; Sn-c, Substantia nigra pars compacta; Sn-r, Substantia nigra pars reticulata.
Some examples of the effects of histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACi) in animal models of neurodegenerative diseases.
| Sodium butyrate | Transgenic AD mice (CK-p25) | 4 week intra-peritoneal administration improved learning and memory | Fischer et al., |
| Trichostatin A | Transgenic AD mice (APP/PS1) | Acute treatment prior to fear conditioning training rescued hippocampal H4 acetylation levels and contextual freezing performances | Francis et al., |
| Sodium butyrate, sodium valproate, or vorinostat | Transgenic AD mice (APP/PS1) | 2–3 weeks intra-peritoneal injection reversed contextual memory deficits | Kilgore et al., |
| Sodium butyrate | Transgenic AD mice (APP/PS1) | Chronic intra-peritoneal injection improved associative memory | Govindarajan et al., |
| Sodium butyrate | Transgenic AD mice (Tg2576) | 5 week intra-peritoneal injection decreased tau phosphorylation and restored dendritic spine density in hippocampal neurons | Ricobaraza et al., |
| MS-275 (entinostat) | Transgenic AD mice (APP/PS1) | 10 days oral administration ameliorated neuroinflammation and cerebral amyloidosis and improved behavior | Zhang and Schluesener, |
| W2 (Class II HDACi) | Transgenic AD mice (3 × AD) | 4 weeks intra-peritoneal injection improved memory functions and decreased Aβ and phosphorylated tau levels | Sung et al., |
| Sodium butyrate or vorinostat | 20 days treatment reduced α-synuclein mediated toxicity | Kontopoulos et al., | |
| AK-1 or AGK-2 (sirtuin 2 HDACi) | 20 days treatment reduced α-synuclein mediated toxicity | Outeiro et al., | |
| Valproic acid | Rotenone-induced PD rat model | 4 weeks oral administration counteracted α-synuclein nuclear translocation and toxicity | Monti et al., |
| Sodium butyrate | MPTP-induced PD mouse model | 14 days oral administration up-regulated DJ-1 expression and reduced neurotoxicity | Zhou et al., |
| Sodium butyrate | Rat model of PD | 5 days intra-peritoneal injection alleviated cognitive deficits | Rane et al., |
| Sodium butyrate | Rotenone-induced PD fly model | 3 days oral administration improved locomotor impairment and early mortality | St Laurent et al., |
| Sodium butyrate, trichostatin A, or valproate | ALS mice (SOD1-G93A) | Several studies show that treatments with one ot those agents delayed disease progression and/or increased animal survival | Sugai et al., |
| 4b (HDAC1i and HDAC3i) | Transgenic HD mice | 10–12 weeks injections improved motor functions and elicited cognitive decline | Jia et al., |
| AK-7 (sirtuin 2 HDACi) | Transgenic HD mice | 4 weeks intra-peritoneal injection improved motor functions, extended survival and reduced mutant huntingtin aggregation | Chopra et al., |
Most of the used transgenic models over-expressed mutant proteins (amyloid precursor protein and presenilin 1 in AD APP/PS1 models, α-synuclein in PD models, mutant superoxide dismutase “SOD1” in ALS models, and mutant huntingtin in HD model) or were induced by pesticide exposure (such as rotenone or 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine “MPTP”). AD, Alzheimer's disease; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; HD, Huntington's disease; PD, Parkinson's disease).