Literature DB >> 25155142

Targets for future clinical trials in Huntington's disease: what's in the pipeline?

Edward J Wild1, Sarah J Tabrizi.   

Abstract

The known genetic cause of Huntington's disease (HD) has fueled considerable progress in understanding its pathobiology and the development of therapeutic approaches aimed at correcting specific changes linked to the causative mutation. Among the most promising is reducing expression of mutant huntingtin protein (mHTT) with RNA interference or antisense oligonucleotides; human trials are now being planned. Zinc-finger transcriptional repression is another innovative method to reduce mHTT expression. Modulation of mHTT phosphorylation, chaperone upregulation, and autophagy enhancement represent attempts to alter cellular homeostasis to favor removal of mHTT. Inhibition of histone deacetylases (HDACs) remains of interest; recent work affirms HDAC4 as a target but questions the assumed centrality of its catalytic activity in HD. Phosphodiesterase inhibition, aimed at restoring synaptic function, has progressed rapidly to human trials. Deranged cellular signaling provides several tractable targets, but specificity and complexity are challenges. Restoring neurotrophic support in HD remains a key potential therapeutic approach. with several approaches being pursued, including brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mimesis through tyrosine receptor kinase B (TrkB) agonism and monoclonal antibodies. An increasing understanding of the role of glial cells in HD has led to several new therapeutic avenues, including kynurenine monooxygenase inhibition, immunomodulation by laquinimod, CB2 agonism, and others. The complex metabolic derangements in HD remain under study, but no clear therapeutic strategy has yet emerged. We conclude that many exciting therapeutics are progressing through the development pipeline, and combining a better understanding of HD biology in human patients, with concerted medicinal chemistry efforts, will be crucial for bringing about an era of effective therapies.
© 2014 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HDAC inhibition; Huntington's disease; MAPK; gene silencing; glial cells; kynurenine monooxygenase; phosphodiesterase inhibition; therapeutics

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25155142      PMCID: PMC4265300          DOI: 10.1002/mds.26007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mov Disord        ISSN: 0885-3185            Impact factor:   10.338


Huntington's disease (HD) is characterized by a number of certainties: It is inherited, fully penetrant, neurodegenerative, progressive, fatal, and caused by CAG repeat expansions in the gene encoding huntingtin. So far, another certainty has been the failure of every attempt to prevent or slow its progression in patients and mutation carriers.1 However, the known cause of HD and our ever-increasing understanding of the events that connect the mutation to the clinical features of the disease continue to inspire confidence that one or more dysfunctions leading to HD will prove tractable. Here we review those therapeutic targets in the pipeline, borne from our understanding of the diverse effects of the HD mutation, that we consider most likely to give rise to viable treatments that may reach clinical trials in the foreseeable future. Figure 1 gives an overview of the targets we discuss, and these are summarized in Table1.
FIG 1

Schematic depicting current priority preclinical therapeutic targets under investigation for Huntington's disease. HTT, huntingtin; KMO, kynurenine monooxygenase; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; PDE, phosphodiesterase; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; HDAC, histone deacetylase; Trk, tropomyosin-related kinase. Adapted from Ross et al.36

TABLE 1

Summary of current priority preclinical therapeutic targets in Huntington's diseasea

Mechanism/TargetCompoundTested inEntityRef
HTT lowering by RNAiAllele-nonspecific siRNA, intrastriatal convection-enhanced deliveryNHPAlnylam Inc. / Medtronic, Inc.21
Allele-nonspecific siRNA, AAV delivery, intrastriatal injectionNHPMedtronic Inc.20
Allele-nonspecific miRNA, AAV delivery, intrastriatal injectionNHPU. Iowa19
Allele-nonspecific siRNA, cholesterol-conjugated, intrastriatal injectionMouseMGH / UMass / Alnylam Inc.26
Allele-specific single-stranded siRNA, intraventricular infusionMouseUTSW / UCSD / Isis28
HTT lowering by ASOAllele-nonspecific ASO, intrathecal injectionNHPIsis22
Allele-specific ASO, intrastriatal injectionMouseUBC / Isis7
Allele-specific CAG-targeted ASOCellsU. Leiden / Prosensa23
HTT lowering by ZFPAllele-specific ZFP transcriptional repressor, AAV delivery, intrastriatal injectionMouseEMBL/CRG SBRU3
Sangamo3
Posttranslational modificationKinase inhibitionCellsMcMaster U.38
Ganglioside GM1, intraventricular infusionMouseMcMaster U.41
Chaperone enhancementGenetic overexpression of HSJ1aMouseKCL44
Recombinant ApiCCT1CellsUC Irvine / Stanford-47
Autophagy enhancersTrehalose, calpastatin, nicardipine, minoxidilMouseVarious50
Acetylation promoter (selisistat)HumanSiena Biotech52, 54
Aggregation preventionHDAC4 genetic knockdownMouseKCL57
Small molecule HDAC4 inhibitionMouseCHDI61
Phosphodiesterase 10A inhibitionPF-2545920HumanPfizer72
OMS643762HumanOmeros120
MAPK cell signalingJNK/p38 inhibition via MKP-1 overexpressionMouseEPFL80
MLK2 inhibition by CEP-1347MouseUC Irvine81
Neurotrophic supportTrkB agonists (7,8-DHF / 4′-DMA-7,8-DHF)MouseJohns Hopkins89
TrkB agonist (LM22A-4)MouseStanford90
TrkB agonist (monoclonal antibody)CellsCHDI91
BDNF transcriptional activationZebrafishU. Milano92
CysteamineHumanRaptor94
KMO inhibitionJM6 / Ro-61-8048MouseUCSF102
CHDI-340246NHPCHDI103
ImmunomodulationLaquinimodHuman (MS)Teva108
CB2 agonist (GW405833)MouseUCSF109
P2X7 antagonismBrilliant blue GMouseCSIC/UAM110
Astrocytic glutamate uptakeEAAT2 promoter activation (ceftriaxone)MouseU. Indiana115

‘Tested in’ refers to most advanced model or organism in which successful target modulation has been demonstrated.

HTT, huntingtin protein; RNAi, RNA interference; siRNA, short interfering RNA; NHP, non-human primate; AAV, adeno-associated virus; miRNA, microRNA; MGH, Massachusetts General Hospital; ASO, antisense oligonucleotide; UBC, University of British Colombia; ZFP, zinc finger proteins; EMBL/CRG SBRU, European Molecular Biology Laboratory Systems Biology Research Unit; HSJ1a, Homo sapiens J domain protein 1a; ApiCCT1, apical domain of chaperonin containing T-complex protein-1/T-complex protein-1 ring subunit CCT1; KCL, King's College London; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; JNK, c-Jun terminal kinases; MKP-1, MAP kinase phosphatase 1; EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne; TrkB, tropomyosin-related kinase B; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; UCSF, University of California San Francisco; KMO, kynurenine monooxygenase; MS, multiple sclerosis; CB2, cannabinoid Receptor 2; P2X7, purine receptor 2X7; CSIC, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas; UAM, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; EAAT2, excitatory amino acid transporter 2.

Schematic depicting current priority preclinical therapeutic targets under investigation for Huntington's disease. HTT, huntingtin; KMO, kynurenine monooxygenase; NMDA, N-methyl-D-aspartate; PDE, phosphodiesterase; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; HDAC, histone deacetylase; Trk, tropomyosin-related kinase. Adapted from Ross et al.36 Summary of current priority preclinical therapeutic targets in Huntington's diseasea ‘Tested in’ refers to most advanced model or organism in which successful target modulation has been demonstrated. HTT, huntingtin protein; RNAi, RNA interference; siRNA, short interfering RNA; NHP, non-human primate; AAV, adeno-associated virus; miRNA, microRNA; MGH, Massachusetts General Hospital; ASO, antisense oligonucleotide; UBC, University of British Colombia; ZFP, zinc finger proteins; EMBL/CRG SBRU, European Molecular Biology Laboratory Systems Biology Research Unit; HSJ1a, Homo sapiens J domain protein 1a; ApiCCT1, apical domain of chaperonin containing T-complex protein-1/T-complex protein-1 ring subunit CCT1; KCL, King's College London; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; JNK, c-Jun terminal kinases; MKP-1, MAP kinase phosphatase 1; EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne; TrkB, tropomyosin-related kinase B; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; UCSF, University of California San Francisco; KMO, kynurenine monooxygenase; MS, multiple sclerosis; CB2, cannabinoid Receptor 2; P2X7, purine receptor 2X7; CSIC, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas; UAM, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid; EAAT2, excitatory amino acid transporter 2.

Reducing Huntingtin Expression

In contrast to other prevalent neurodegenerative disorders, the known genetic cause of HD allows the known pathogenic entity, mutant huntingtin protein (mHTT), to be targeted with certainty. Lowering expression of mHTT at the level of DNA (transcription) or RNA (translation) ought to reduce all of the downstream deleterious effects of the protein that lead to the manifestations of HD. Such strategies are sometimes known as “gene silencing”—somewhat misleadingly, because no approach is expected to stop mHTT expression altogether—or “huntingtin lowering” or “huntingtin suppression”. These approaches aimed at reducing HTT expression are considered among the most promising emerging therapeutics to slow or prevent HD.2,3 Three broad approaches are under investigation to reduce mHTT expression: RNA interference (RNAi) using short interfering RNA (siRNA); translational repression using single-stranded DNA-based antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs); and transcriptional repression using zinc finger proteins (ZFPs). Some of these approaches constitute “gene therapy”—namely, those delivered or expressed using viral technology, such as ZFPs or some RNAi methods, whereas central nervous system (CNS) delivery of antisense oligonucleotides or siRNAs is not gene therapy.

Nucleotide-Based Silencing

RNA interference and ASO repression use synthetic modified nucleotide agents designed to bind to a chosen sequence in the HTT messenger RNA (mRNA), using Watson-Crick complementarity. Once bound, different cellular mRNA disposal mechanisms remove the HTT mRNA, resulting in reduced translation and lowered protein expression (Fig. 2).2,4
FIG 2

Schematic illustration of the three main approaches to lowering huntingtin expression. Zinc finger protein (ZFP) therapeutics aim to reduce transcription of the huntingtin gene. Translational repression can be attempted at the pre-mRNA level using DNA-based antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) or on mature mRNA using short interfering RNA (siRNA) compounds. Different cellular mechanisms degrade the bound mRNA.4

Schematic illustration of the three main approaches to lowering huntingtin expression. Zinc finger protein (ZFP) therapeutics aim to reduce transcription of the huntingtin gene. Translational repression can be attempted at the pre-mRNA level using DNA-based antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) or on mature mRNA using short interfering RNA (siRNA) compounds. Different cellular mechanisms degrade the bound mRNA.4 In RNAi, the drug molecule can be either an siRNA or a microRNA (miRNA) molecule. Degradation of siRNA-bound mRNA is performed by the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which incorporates the RNAse enzyme argonaute. The ASOs are modified single-stranded DNA molecules, and ASO-bound mRNA is degraded by RNAse H (Fig. 2).5 Nucleotide-based gene silencing methods have advanced considerably in recent years and are approaching readiness for trials in human HD patients. Numerous successes have now been reported in rodent models, first with RNA-based drugs6 and more recently with ASOs.7 Most animal work has focused on nonselective silencing of both wild-type and mutant HTT alleles, and the first human trials will take this approach. Directly infused into the brain parenchyma or ventricles of HD model mice, these drugs appear capable of significantly reducing mRNA expression and HTT protein levels. This has been associated with not just slowing of the phenotypic progression of HD, but with substantial improvement in some manifestations having clinically significant counterparts in the human disease. For instance, intra-striatal injection of an adeno-associated virus (AAV2) vector expressing HTT-silencing miRNA in the YAC128 HD mouse model produced transduction of approximately 80% of the striatum, approximately 50% reduction in HTT mRNA, and a similar reduction in HTT protein; reduced mHTT aggregation; restored performance on a behavioral task modeling depression to near-wild-type levels; and showed no evidence of inflammation or neurotoxicity.8 The ASOs are no less successful: intraventricular infusion in three HD mouse models produced more than 60% reduction in HTT mRNA and more than 80% reduction in HTT protein; mHTT aggregate formation was delayed and motor performance improved with treatment. Strikingly, these improvements significantly outlasted both the presence of the ASO drug and the reduction in soluble protein,9 suggesting that dysfunctioning cells are able to recover from at least some deleterious effects of mHTT if expression of the protein is even transiently reduced, restoring the balance of damage and repair. Of course, whether this optimistic “huntingtin holiday” concept will translate into human patients for these therapeutics remains to be seen.10,11 In 2013, the first phase 1 human trial of an intrathecally delivered ASO, targeting superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, was completed without significant safety issues reported, paving the way for such trials with such agents in HD.12

Potential Risks of Gene Silencing

Lowering huntingtin expression is not without its challenges. Safety is a major concern: both off-target effects and on-target lowering of wild-type HTT levels could produce unforeseen consequences in humans. The corollary of sustained benefit may be sustained adverse effects and the absence of an “off-switch,” particularly for gene therapy approaches such as ZFP, and viral delivery of siRNAs or miRNAs, but also for long-lasting drugs such as ASOs, is cause for proceeding with caution to human trials. A major unknown is the effect of lowering wild-type HTT in humans. HTT is clearly an important protein, because knocking out the gene is embryonic lethal in murine models,13 and conditional huntingtin knockout has been reported to produce neurodegeneration.14 Although transient long-acting ASO-induced HTT knockdown in wild-type BACHD mice by 75% produced no detectable behavioral or motor deficits,9 subtler effects could be missed in murine studies, and the effect of reducing wild-type HTT in human patients is unknown. However, we do know with certainty that mHTT expression causes HD; therefore, we hope that the benefits of lowering the toxic mHTT protein will significantly outweigh the potential side effects of lowering wild-type HTT. Other safety concerns are generic to the molecules and delivery methodologies necessary to obtain translational repression in the CNS. The presence of synthetic oligonucleotides per se, some with backbone chemistries not seen in nature, could cause toxicity or neuroinflammation independently of their effects on gene expression.15 Although the safety and efficacy of viral vectors is improving, concerns remain around their possible immunogenicity, either on first dosing16 or as a limitation to the later administration of newer AAV-delivered compounds to patients dosed previously. Future oligonucleotide-based gene silencing drugs are likely to be even more effective. Candidate nucleotide sequences have been optimized through rational design to maximize binding to HTT mRNA while minimizing off-target effects through binding to other mRNAs,17 whereas improvements in the nucleotide backbone chemistry promise improved specificity, potency, and stability.18 So far, the available safety data, especially from several recent nonhuman primate trials, are encouraging. In wild-type rhesus macaques, McBride and colleagues19 produced up to 45% sustained wild-type HTT reduction in the striatum using AAV-delivered shRNA without evidence of adverse effects; Grondin and colleagues20 demonstrated safety of AAV-mediated RNAi striatal wild-type HTT suppression over six months; Stiles and colleagues21 found 28 days' convection-enhanced siRNA delivery to be well tolerated; and ASOs infused into the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid produced distribution to the cortex and, to a lesser extent, some deep brain structures, without adverse effects.22

Allele-Selective Silencing

One way to obviate the risk of WT HTT knockdown is to target the mutant allele selectively. Targeting the CAG repeat to achieve allele-selective knockdown is under investigation23 but carries a risk of off-target effects on other polyCAG-containing genes. Another strategy is to identify and target single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on the mutant allele, an approach that may be able to provide allele-selective mHTT silencing for a certain percentage of HD mutation carriers, amounting to personalized genomic medicine in which individual subjects with the correct SNP genotype on the mutant allele may be treated.7,24 The existence of a few common haplotypes means some SNPs are overrepresented on alleles also bearing HTT expansions, suggesting that a small number of SNP-targeted drugs could provide allele-selective silencing for most individuals.24 However, targeting polymorphisms dramatically reduces the repertoire of possible RNA target sequences, increasing the chance of off-target effects; developing multiple agents, each targeting a different SNP, has significant regulatory, cost, and practical implications. Non-allele–selective approaches are much more likely to reach human trials sooner, because such agents are more advanced in the HD therapeutic pipeline; but both approaches are being actively developed.

The Distribution Problem

The other major challenge is delivery and distribution of the HTT suppression agents in the CNS. Whereas in nonhuman primates, ASOs diffuse rather widely into the cortex when injected into the lumbar cerebrospinal fluid, their distribution is not universal, and in particular the striatum, affected prominently and early in HD, absorbs relatively little after lumbar injection.22 The siRNAs have even less natural diffusion and uptake, but this can be enhanced by a number of methods, including viral vectors, exosomes,25 cholesterol conjugation,26 convection-enhanced delivery, and novel conjugates of single-stranded siRNA compounds.27,28 Targeting both cortex and striatum using different delivery methods has been proposed to overcome these limitations, and we think this may be an important future therapeutic approach.11 This is supported by recent work demonstrating that reducing mHTT expression in both cortex and striatum is necessary for optimal suppression of relevant phenotypes in a murine model of HD.29 Meanwhile, the development of technologies such as the Roche “brain shuttle” raises the prospect of allowing CNS penetration by peripheral administration of potential therapeutic agents.30

Zinc Fingers

Another exciting advance uses zinc finger protein repressors, which are transcription factor DNA-recognition motifs that can be designed to allow selective binding to specific DNA sequences, and fused to a transcriptional repressor domain (Fig. 2). Zinc-finger proteins (ZFPs) can repress protein production by reducing transcription.31 In theory, this combines the virtues of RNAi translational repression with the added advantages of obviating potential harm from toxicity of mHTT mRNA32 or from alternatively spliced HTT species that may lack the targeted mRNA sequence33—pathobiological mechanisms that have both been proposed in HD. Two groups have targeted the expanded CAG repeat that causes HD using ZFP-based compounds encoded by viral vectors. Serendipitously, the proximity of the CAG repeat to the 5' end of the HTT gene appears to confer considerable selectivity over other polyCAG-containing genes. The approach has so far demonstrated successful selective repression of mHTT and amelioration of motor manifestations in an HD mouse model, but it shares the delivery and distribution hurdles of other virally delivered HTT-lowering methods.3,34 The ability of ZFPs to target nuclease-induced DNA scission and repair raises the tantalizing prospect of true gene therapy for HD in which excessive CAGs are excised from the genomes of expansion carriers through “genome editing.”35

Protein Homeostasis

Once expressed, mHTT interacts with hundreds of partners, undergoes dozens of post-translational modifications, forms intranuclear and cytoplasmic aggregates, and may be degraded through autophagy. The complex life of mHTT in cells offers a multitude of potential therapeutic targets.1,36 Prioritizing these is currently limited by a lack of understanding of the most toxic HTT species and the difficulty of modulating multifunctional targets. Modulation of mHTT post-translational modification is appealing because it is carried out by enzymes that ought to be targetable by small molecule therapeutics (Fig. 1). Phosphorylation of N-terminal mHTT at serines 13 and 16 reduces its toxicity in vivo37 and affects its intracellular targeting,38 whereas phosphorylation at serine 421 restores the ability of mHTT to promote axonal vesicular transport and neurotrophic factor release.39 Small-molecule kinase inhibitors modulating N-terminal mHTT phosphorylation have been identified and are under investigation,38 but whether inhibitors that can specifically increase desirable phosphorylation of key residues, while avoiding harmful phosphorylation events elsewhere in mHTT, or other proteins, remains to be seen. The same is true of all potentially important post-translational modification. One striking recent report linked to post-translational modification concerns gangliosides—CNS-abundant glycosphingolipids with roles in membrane functioning and cell signaling that have been shown to be deficient in HD models.40 Chronic intraventricular infusion of ganglioside GM1 in YAC128 mice restored normal motor function and expression of the striatal marker DARPP32 and increased phosphorylation of HTT at serines 13 and 16.41 The mechanism of this intriguing result is unclear: It requires replication and further mechanistic study as a possible therapeutic avenue. Although whether mHTT aggregates are neuroprotective, neurotoxic, or both remains unclear, disordered protein folding and aggregation are a potentially tractable hallmark of HD. Upregulation of chaperone proteins in an attempt to reduce harmful misfolding of mHTT has previously shown limited therapeutic potential in mammalian HD models.42,43 However, overexpression of HSJ1a in R6/2 mice was shown to reduce the formation of large nuclear aggregates and modestly delayed disease progression, surprisingly mediated by detergent-insoluble mHTT species that had already begun to aggregate.44 Another chaperone, TCP1-ring complex (TRiC), is known to suppress mHTT aggregation,45,46 and a recombinant subunit of TRiC, ApiCCT1, was recently shown to be able to enter cells, where it decreased the formation of visible inclusions and fibrillar oligomers and reduced mHTT-induced toxicity.47 Whether this is a viable therapeutic strategy remains to be seen, but an increased understanding of chaperone proteins and protein homeostasis is capable of generating novel, apparently tractable therapeutic targets. Mutant huntingtin protein can be cleared by macroautophagy but impairs its own clearance through impaired cargo recognition.48 Enhancing autophagy through mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibition by rapamycin improved phenotypes in fly and mouse models of HD,49 and a number of agents have shown similar effects in model systems,50 and upregulation of autophagy to clear mHTT is an important potential therapeutic strategy. A cellular imaging screen for autophagy enhancers revealed a candidate compound that was neuroprotective against mHTT and several related FDA-approved compounds with similar potential.51 Acetylation of mHTT targets it for degradation by autophagy49 and more generally, hypoacetylation of chromatin is a feature of HD, so promoting acetylation has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy. Selisistat, an inhibitor of the deacetylase sirtuin 1, was recently shown to suppress mHTT-induced pathology in Drosophila, mammalian HD cell models, and the R6/2 mouse, where it significantly improved survival and behavioral but not motor phenotype, and reduced aggregate formation.52 Whether this was accomplished through autophagy enhancement or another means is unclear, and the role of sirtuin 1 is controversial, its overexpression in HD mammalian models also having been reported as neuroprotective.53 A recent phase 1B clinical trial of selisistat in early HD demonstrated safety and tolerability.54

Histone Deacetylase Inhibition

With the aim of correcting transcriptional dysregulation, histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors have been under study for a number of years in HD. The HDACs are potent regulators of transcription through chromatin modification. The nonselective HDAC inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid was shown to ameliorate the motor phenotype in R6/2 mice.55 Although compounds targeting HDAC1 and HDAC3 have been shown to ameliorate disease phenotypes in fly and cellular models,56 systematic work has shown HDAC4 to be the sole HDAC among 11 whose genetic knockdown ameliorates the HD phenotype in mouse models.57–60 HDAC4 inhibition has therefore been a focus for therapeutic development in HD, and potent, selective small-molecule inhibitors of its enzymatic function have been developed.61 Unexpectedly, though genetic HDAC4 knockdown improved neuropathology, synaptic function, motor phenotype, and lifespan in R6/2 mice, it did so without improving global transcriptional dysregulation. These double-transgenic animals show delayed cytoplasmic mHTT aggregation, and HDAC4 is now known to co-localize with cytoplasmic inclusions.57 This novel, cytoplasmic role for HDAC4 calls into question whether inhibition of its catalytic site is necessary or sufficient to recapitulate the strikingly favorable features of genetic HDAC4 knockdown. A reappraisal of the therapeutic effect of suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid in HD model mice revealed that it reduced HDAC4 level through increased degradation.62 Understanding and modulating the noncatalytic functions of HDAC4 is a focus of current study.

Phosphodiesterase Inhibition

Altered synaptic plasticity is one potentially reversible cause of dysfunction in HD. Impairment of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) signaling63 and dysregulation of gene transcription mediated by the cAMP response element (CRE)64 are established features of HD. Phosphodiesterase (PDE) 10A is almost exclusively expressed in the striatum,65 and its activity is intimately linked to the synaptic biology of medium spiny neurons whose death is a prominent feature of HD. PDE10A regulates cAMP and cyclic guanosine monophosphate signalling, synaptic plasticity and the response to cortical stimulation.66,67 PDE10A inhibition or genetic deletion produces numerous CRE–related gene expression changes68 and alterations in synaptic function69 suggested to be beneficial in schizophrenia and HD.67 In the R6/2 mouse, PDE10A inhibition with TP-10 ameliorated motor deficits, reduced striatal atrophy and increased brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels.70 Detailed study of PDE10A and its pharmacological inhibition is underway to validate it as a target in HD. One concern is that early death of striatal neurons might deplete PDE10A levels to the extent that the target is lost; however, PET imaging with the PDE10A radioligand [18F]-MNI-695 suggests that enzyme levels are sufficient even in manifest HD to expect a meaningful response.71 Clinical trials of PDE10A inhibition in HD patients are already underway, with motor and functional MRI endpoints.72 Other phosphodiesterases implicated in HD pathogenesis are also under study. PDE4 inhibition with rolipram, meanwhile, improved survival and ameliorated neuropathology and motor phenotypes in the R6/2 mouse.73

Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Cell Signaling

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling is involved in the regulation of many cellular functions in response to a variety of stimuli. Abnormal MAPK signaling is a feature of HD; in particular, the MAPKs JNK (c-Jun terminal kinases), ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinases), and p38, and the upstream kinase mixed lineage kinase 2 (MLK2), are overactive in HD.74–76 One effect of this may be impaired axonal transport, caused by JNK3-induced phosphorylation of kinesin-1.77 Additionally, p38 overactivity may contribute to NMDA-receptor–mediated excitotoxicity.78 Extracellular signal-regulated kinase overactivation is complex and may overall be protective in the presence of mHTT.76 Treatment of R6/2 mice with sodium butyrate was neuroprotective and extended survival; it also induced upregulation of MKP-1, a negative regulator of MAPK signaling.79 However, sodium butyrate likely acts via multiple mechanisms. Recently, specific overexpression of MKP-1 was shown to exert neuroprotective effects against mHTT through inhibition of JNK and p38.80 Pharmacological MLK2 inhibition reduced toxicity in several model systems and increased motor performance and BDNF levels in the R6/2 mouse.81 Small-molecule approaches to activate MKP-1 and ERK, or to inhibit MLK2, JNK, and p38, may be of value, but these pathways, their role in HD, and the optimal targets and means of modulating them are incompletely understood.

Neurotrophic Factors

Depletion of BDNF is a well-established feature of the HD brain. Produced by cortical neurons, BDNF promotes neuronal growth, survival, and plasticity. It is particularly important for the survival of striatal neurons that are affected prominently in HD and may protect against excitotoxicity.82 Several mechanisms have been implicated in the depletion of BDNF in HD, including transcriptional dysregulation83 and reduced axonal transport.84 Restoration of BDNF levels, or those of related neurotrophins such as glial cell–derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), is of interest, but the challenges of delivering a protein-based therapeutic to the CNS are considerable. Delivery of BDNF and GDNF using viral85 or stem-cell86 vehicles has shown some potential. Clinical trials in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients have demonstrated that intraparenchymal AAV-mediated delivery of the GDNF analog neurturin to the putamen is safe and well-tolerated but have yet to meet a primary efficacy endpoint.87 Postmortem analysis has confirmed successful induction and sustained expression of neurturin. A recently completed phase 2b trial has been reported as again meeting safety but not efficacy endpoints.88 One reason for efficacy failure of this approach may be the difficulty of identifying PD patients sufficiently early to intervene successfully. The monogenic, penetrant nature of HD perhaps makes it more amenable to this approach to neurotrophin delivery, because treatment could be initiated early in the disease or even before symptom onset. BDNF acts principally through binding to TrkB receptors, and one approach to overcome the limitations of a protein-based therapeutic has been to develop small-molecule TrkB agonists. Several experimental compounds have now been tested in HD rodent models. Jiang and colleagues orally administered two presumed TrkB agonists (7,8-DHF and 4′-DMA-7,8-DHF) to N171-82Q mice and showed increased striatal TrkB phosphorylation, significantly improved motor function, increased lifespan, and reduced brain atrophy in treated animals.89 Simmons and colleagues90 demonstrated similar benefits from another TrkB agonist, LM22A-4, in the R6/2 and BACHD models, and additionally showed reduced intranuclear aggregation of mHTT in striatum and cortex. However, Todd and colleagues91 compared 7,8-DHF, LM22A-4, and other reported small-molecule TrkB agonists. In contrast to previous reports, all tested compounds displayed a lack of TrkB agonism, no activation of relevant pathways, and no neuroprotection against mHTT in corticostriatal co-culture. However, two monoclonal antibodies were shown to agonize TrkB in a manner akin to BDNF and protected striatal neurons from mHTT-induced toxicity. Though challenging, the use of monoclonal antibodies as BDNF mimics warrants further study.91 An innovative approach to restoring neurotrophic support in HD is to target the transcriptional dysregulation that partly underlies the BDNF deficiency in HD. Abnormal repression of BDNF expression by the transcription factor REST/NRSF has been demonstrated in HD. Conforti and colleagues92 screened for compounds capable of inhibiting the formation of the REST-mSIN3 complex that is required for transcriptional repression. They identified a compound, C91, that increased BDNF mRNA levels in Htt-knockdown and mHTT-expressing zebrafish models.92 This novel approach is in its infancy but offers another avenue for rescuing the BDNF deficit in HD. Finally, the FDA-approved compound cysteamine is thought to increase brain levels of BDNF by stimulating its release through an interaction with the heat-shock protein HSJ1b.93 A recent trial of cysteamine in HD patients has recently completed, but although a suggestion of motor improvement occurred in a subgroup analysis, the primary efficacy endpoint was not met; the full results of the trial, and its open-label extension, are awaited.94

Modulation of Glial Activity

Although the clinical features of HD are undoubtedly driven by cell-autonomous effects of mHTT causing neuronal dysfunction and death, the role of non-neuronal cells in the pathobiology of HD is increasingly a focus for study and as a source of tractable therapeutic targets. Huntingtin is ubiquitously expressed, and glial cells may display cell-autonomous dysfunctions of their own,95 which may exacerbate an already precarious situation for neurons. Excitotoxicity is a long-hypothesized contributor to neuronal dysfunction and death in HD. The earliest HD models were generated by intrastriatal injection of the excitotoxic NMDA agonist quinolinic acid (QA) in rodents.96 Quinolinic acid is an endogenous metabolite produced by the degradation of tryptophan by the kynurenine pathway. The enzyme kynurenine monooxygenase (KMO) is a key branchpoint in this pathway, and its activity determines the balance of QA and the neuroprotectant metabolites kynurenic acid (KA) and kynurenine. In the CNS, the kynurenine pathway is confined to microglial cells.97 QA levels are increased and KA levels decreased in post-mortem HD patient brain.98,99 A yeast genomic screen highlighted KMO as a leading therapeutic target,100 and subsequent work in drosophila has confirmed this.101 Zwilling and colleagues102 treated R6/2 HD model mice with a KMO inhibitor compound, JM6, and found increased brain levels of KA and decreased glutamate. Treated animals displayed improved survival, reduced loss of the synaptic marker synaptophysin, and a decrease in abnormal microglial activation. Neither JM6 nor its metabolites cross the blood–brain barrier, suggesting that its beneficial effects are mediated by peripheral KMO inhibition, producing beneficial effects for the CNS via the transit of an intermediate compound, possibly kynurenine.102 Subsequent work by Beconi and colleagues120 has questioned the status of JM6 as a KMO inhibitor, suggesting that the observed effects were likely attributable to contamination by the known KMO inhibitor Ro-61-8048; however, the status of KMO inhibition, peripherally or centrally, as a therapeutic target remains strong. Indeed a novel peripherally acting KMO inhibitor, CHDI-340246, has been reported to increase levels of kynurenine and KA in HD rodent models and the cerebrospinal fluid of nonhuman primates.103 Hyperactivity of the innate immune system, both centrally and peripherally, as a result of the cell-autonomous effects of mHTT in monocytes and microglia, and mediated by the nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB) pathway, is now an established pathogenic pathway in HD.95,104 Whether immunomodulation by any of the wide array of agents available is capable of preventing or reversing this detectable phenotype, and whether this will prove beneficial in patients, remains to be seen. Although its precise mechanism of action is unknown, the immunomodulator laquinimod reduces (NFκB) activation in astrocytes105 and may restore BDNF levels.106 Laquinimod also may act in part through the MAPK signaling pathway, reducing the phosphorylation of p38 and JNK,107 linking this compound to the cell signaling pathways discussed previously. Having demonstrated potential in multiple sclerosis,108 laquinimod's effects on tractable dysfunctions in HD are under investigation, and clinical trials in HD are planned. CB2 cannabinoid receptors are expressed in microglia and peripheral immune cells; their activation is anti-inflammatory, and their levels are increased in postmortem HD brain. Genetic deletion of CB2 receptors was found to accelerate the phenotype in bacterial artificial chromosome HD (BACHD) mice, whereas treatment with the CB2 agonist GW405833 ameliorated it and prolonged survival. This effect was reversed by co-administration of a peripherally acting CB2 antagonist, suggesting again that peripheral immunomodulation may be capable of altering the CNS phenotype of HD.109 The microglial and neuronal P2X7 receptor is an adenosine triphosphate–gated ion channel that has been found to be overexpressed in synaptic terminals in HD.110 Extracellular adenosine triphosphate, acting on this receptor, stimulates synaptic dysregulation and neuronal death through apoptotic and nonapoptotic mechanisms111; in HD model mice, a P2X7 antagonist reduced apoptotic neuronal death, weight loss, and motor deficits.110 P2X7 in both neurons and microglia is under investigation as a potential therapeutic target. Extracellular glutamate, which may contribute to excitotoxic neuronal death, is predominantly (90%) removed by excitatory amino acid transporter 2 (EAAT2), predominantly expressed in astrocytes.112 EAAT2 and its ortholog GLT1 show reduced expression in the R6/2 mouse and human HD brain113,114 although whether receptor deficiency is the cause of impaired glutamate in HD striatum is less clear.115 EAAT2 expression may be amenable to pharmacological modulation through activation of its promoter by the antibiotic ceftriaxone.116 In one study, ceftriaxone treatment increased overall receptor expression and ameliorated motor deficits in R6/2 mice.115 Whether EAAT2 in relevant cell populations is amenable to sustained pharmacological upregulation in HD, and whether this will be beneficial in patients, remains to be seen.

Metabolism

Numerous alterations of cellular energetic mechanisms have been described in HD, albeit with inconsistent findings, especially comparing animal and human studies117; however, an association between energetic deficits and the length of the CAG triplet repeat presents a compelling case for a direct causation by the mutant gene.118 Human trials of several antioxidant molecules have not yielded any clear therapeutic success, however, and improvement of our understanding of HD-specific metabolic derangements is needed to develop more targeted therapeutics.117 Modulation of the metabolic transcriptional coactivator Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator (PGC1α), perhaps through agonism of the nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma by rosiglitazone, has been reported as ameliorating motor deficits and increasing cortical BDNF in an HD mouse model, although apparently without effect on striatal pathology.119 A much improved understanding of the complex metabolic effects of mHTT is needed.

Conclusion

As our understanding of the consequences of the HD mutation increases, so the range of tractable targets for therapeutic development broadens. While there are many potential targets, few are well-validated, and many single studies of purported success have yet to be replicated. Another problem is the shortcomings of our model systems and the failure, so far, of any agent that has been beneficial in an HD mouse model to prove so in human patients. Insights from studying patients are likely to be key to bridging this so-called “valley of death”: increasingly we are inclined and able to demonstrate relevant derangements in patients or patient-derived tissue before embarking on expensive and potentially hazardous clinical trials. Our understanding of therapeutic targets36 and our ability to prosecute them is better than ever, thanks in part to the increasingly prominent, concerted involvement of medicinal chemists in the field,61 and we anticipate an exciting era in the near future in which multiple agents, designed specifically to target the known pathobiology of HD, will enter clinical trials with a reasonable expectation of success.
  113 in total

1.  Rational design of therapeutic siRNAs: minimizing off-targeting potential to improve the safety of RNAi therapy for Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Ryan L Boudreau; Ryan M Spengler; Beverly L Davidson
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2011-09-27       Impact factor: 11.454

2.  Mutant huntingtin alters MAPK signaling pathways in PC12 and striatal cells: ERK1/2 protects against mutant huntingtin-associated toxicity.

Authors:  Barbara L Apostol; Katalin Illes; Judit Pallos; Laszlo Bodai; Jun Wu; Andrew Strand; Erik S Schweitzer; James M Olson; Aleksey Kazantsev; J Lawrence Marsh; Leslie Michels Thompson
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2005-12-05       Impact factor: 6.150

3.  Binding of the repressor complex REST-mSIN3b by small molecules restores neuronal gene transcription in Huntington's disease models.

Authors:  Paola Conforti; Chiara Zuccato; Germano Gaudenzi; Alessandro Ieraci; Stefano Camnasio; Noel J Buckley; Cesare Mutti; Franco Cotelli; Alessandro Contini; Elena Cattaneo
Journal:  J Neurochem       Date:  2013-07-19       Impact factor: 5.372

Review 4.  Kynurenines in the CNS: recent advances and new questions.

Authors:  László Vécsei; Levente Szalárdy; Ferenc Fülöp; József Toldi
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2012-12-14       Impact factor: 84.694

5.  A potent and selective Sirtuin 1 inhibitor alleviates pathology in multiple animal and cell models of Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Marianne R Smith; Adeela Syed; Tamas Lukacsovich; Judy Purcell; Brett A Barbaro; Shane A Worthge; Stephen R Wei; Giuseppe Pollio; Letizia Magnoni; Carla Scali; Luisa Massai; Davide Franceschini; Michela Camarri; Marco Gianfriddo; Enrica Diodato; Russell Thomas; Ozgun Gokce; S J Tabrizi; Andrea Caricasole; Bernard Landwehrmeyer; Liliana Menalled; Carol Murphy; Sylvie Ramboz; Ruth Luthi-Carter; Goran Westerberg; J Lawrence Marsh
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 6.150

6.  A majority of Huntington's disease patients may be treatable by individualized allele-specific RNA interference.

Authors:  Maria Stella Lombardi; Leonie Jaspers; Christine Spronkmans; Cinzia Gellera; Franco Taroni; Emilio Di Maria; Stefano Di Donato; William F Kaemmerer
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2009-03-13       Impact factor: 5.330

7.  Adenosine and glutamate extracellular concentrations and mitogen-activated protein kinases in the striatum of Huntington transgenic mice. Selective antagonism of adenosine A2A receptors reduces transmitter outflow.

Authors:  M Gianfriddo; A Melani; D Turchi; M G Giovannini; F Pedata
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 5.996

8.  CEP-1347 reduces mutant huntingtin-associated neurotoxicity and restores BDNF levels in R6/2 mice.

Authors:  Barbara L Apostol; Danielle A Simmons; Chiara Zuccato; Katalin Illes; Judit Pallos; Malcolm Casale; Paola Conforti; Catarina Ramos; Margaret Roarke; Satish Kathuria; Elena Cattaneo; J Lawrence Marsh; Leslie Michels Thompson
Journal:  Mol Cell Neurosci       Date:  2008-04-24       Impact factor: 4.314

9.  Genetic deletion of PDE10A selectively impairs incentive salience attribution and decreases medium spiny neuron excitability.

Authors:  Elisabeth Piccart; Jean-François De Backer; David Gall; Laurie Lambot; Adam Raes; Greet Vanhoof; Serge Schiffmann; Rudi D'Hooge
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  2014-03-31       Impact factor: 3.332

10.  Cytosolic chaperonin prevents polyglutamine toxicity with altering the aggregation state.

Authors:  Akira Kitamura; Hiroshi Kubota; Chan-Gi Pack; Gen Matsumoto; Shoshiro Hirayama; Yasuo Takahashi; Hiroshi Kimura; Masataka Kinjo; Richard I Morimoto; Kazuhiro Nagata
Journal:  Nat Cell Biol       Date:  2006-09-17       Impact factor: 28.213

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  56 in total

1.  Increased irritability, anxiety, and immune reactivity in transgenic Huntington's disease monkeys.

Authors:  Jessica Raper; Steven Bosinger; Zachary Johnson; Gregory Tharp; Sean P Moran; Anthony W S Chan
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2016-07-07       Impact factor: 7.217

Review 2.  [Huntington's disease].

Authors:  J D Rollnik
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 1.214

3.  Quantification of mutant huntingtin protein in cerebrospinal fluid from Huntington's disease patients.

Authors:  Edward J Wild; Roberto Boggio; Douglas Langbehn; Nicola Robertson; Salman Haider; James R C Miller; Henrik Zetterberg; Blair R Leavitt; Rainer Kuhn; Sarah J Tabrizi; Douglas Macdonald; Andreas Weiss
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2015-04-06       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  22 Years of predictive testing for Huntington's disease: the experience of the UK Huntington's Prediction Consortium.

Authors:  Sheharyar S Baig; Mark Strong; Elisabeth Rosser; Nicola V Taverner; Ruth Glew; Zosia Miedzybrodzka; Angus Clarke; David Craufurd; Oliver W Quarrell
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2016-05-11       Impact factor: 4.246

5.  Validation of a prognostic index for Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Jeffrey D Long; Douglas R Langbehn; Sarah J Tabrizi; Bernhard G Landwehrmeyer; Jane S Paulsen; John Warner; Cristina Sampaio
Journal:  Mov Disord       Date:  2016-11-28       Impact factor: 10.338

Review 6.  Therapeutic Update on Huntington's Disease: Symptomatic Treatments and Emerging Disease-Modifying Therapies.

Authors:  Deepa Dash; Tiago A Mestre
Journal:  Neurotherapeutics       Date:  2020-10       Impact factor: 7.620

Review 7.  Progress in developing transgenic monkey model for Huntington's disease.

Authors:  Brooke R Snyder; Anthony W S Chan
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2017-11-10       Impact factor: 3.575

Review 8.  Targeting the 26S Proteasome To Protect Against Proteotoxic Diseases.

Authors:  Natura Myeku; Karen E Duff
Journal:  Trends Mol Med       Date:  2017-12-09       Impact factor: 11.951

Review 9.  Application of yeast to studying amyloid and prion diseases.

Authors:  Yury O Chernoff; Anastasia V Grizel; Aleksandr A Rubel; Andrew A Zelinsky; Pavithra Chandramowlishwaran; Tatiana A Chernova
Journal:  Adv Genet       Date:  2020-05-04       Impact factor: 1.944

10.  Prospective Evaluation of Predictive DNA Testing for Huntington's Disease in a Large German Center.

Authors:  Aysegül Ibisler; Sebastian Ocklenburg; Susanne Stemmler; Larissa Arning; Jörg T Epplen; Carsten Saft; Sabine Hoffjan
Journal:  J Genet Couns       Date:  2017-03-30       Impact factor: 2.537

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