| Literature DB >> 25552901 |
Abstract
Down syndrome (DS), also known as trisomy 21, is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability (ID). Although ID can be mild, the average intelligence quotient is in the range of 40-50. All individuals with DS will also develop the neuropathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD) by the age of 30-40 years, and approximately half will display an AD-like dementia by the age of 60 years. DS is caused by an extra copy of the long arm of human chromosome 21 (Hsa21) and the consequent elevated levels of expression, due to dosage, of trisomic genes. Despite a worldwide incidence of one in 700-1,000 live births, there are currently no pharmacological treatments available for ID or AD in DS. However, over the last several years, very promising results have been obtained with a mouse model of DS, the Ts65Dn. A diverse array of drugs has been shown to rescue, or partially rescue, DS-relevant deficits in learning and memory and abnormalities in cellular and electrophysiological features seen in the Ts65Dn. These results suggest that some level of amelioration or prevention of cognitive deficits in people with DS may be possible. Here, we review information from the preclinical evaluations in the Ts65Dn, how drugs were selected, how efficacy was judged, and how outcomes differ, or not, among studies. We also summarize the current state of human clinical trials for ID and AD in DS. Lastly, we describe the genetic limitations of the Ts65Dn as a model of DS, and in the preclinical testing of pharmacotherapeutics, and suggest additional targets to be considered for potential pharmacotherapies.Entities:
Keywords: Hsa21; Ts65Dn; clinical trials; pharmacotherapy
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25552901 PMCID: PMC4277121 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S51476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Drugs tested for the rescue of abnormalities in learning/memory, adult neurogenesis, or long-term potentiation in the Ts65Dn
| Drug | Target/mechanism | Sex; age; dose; method of administration; and length of administration | Phenotypic consequences |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estrogen | Female; 11–14 months; 0.25 mg timed release pellet; 2 months | Partial rescue T-maze | |
| Male; 6 months; 0.25 mg subcutaneously administered timed release pellet; 3 weeks | No rescue RAM | ||
| Minocycline | Tetracycline derivative; neuroprotective; anti-inflammatory | Male; 7 months; 10 mg/kg daily timed release subcutaneous pellet; 3 months | Partial rescue WRAM; prevented loss of ChAT in BFCN |
| Picrotoxin | GABRA antagonist | 3–4 months; 1 mg/kg intraperitoneal, daily; 2 weeks | Rescue NOR |
| PTZ | GABRA antagonist | 3–4 months; 3 mg/kg daily, milk; 2 weeks | Rescue NOR, T-maze, LTP; benefits continued 2 months without the drug |
| Male; 4 months; 3 mg/kg, daily, chocolate milk; 4 weeks | Rescue MWM acquisition (no probe trial); partial impairment equilibrium | ||
| Male; 2–3 months and 12–15 months; 0.3 mg/kg intraperitoneally, daily; 2 weeks | Rescue NOR when drug given in light phase; effects continue 2 weeks without the drug | ||
| α5IA | GABRA α5 subunit-specific inhibitor | Male; 3 months; 5 mg/kg intraperitoneally; daily during 6 days behavioral testing | Rescue NOR and MWM acquisition; no rescue MWM retention |
| RO4938581 | GABRA α5 subunit-specific inhibitor | Male; 3–4 months; 20 mg/kg daily chocolate milk; 6 weeks | Rescue MWM acquisition but not retention (?); rescue LTP; rescue neurogenesis |
| Memantine | Uncompetitive NMDAR antagonist | Male; 4–6 months and 10–14 months; 5 mg/kg intraperitoneally, daily; 15 minutes before behavior test | Rescue CFC |
| Male; 9 months; 30 mg/kg daily H2O; 9 weeks | Rescue MWM acquisition (no probe trial) | ||
| Male; 4 months; 20 mg/kg daily H2O; 6 months | Partial rescue WRAM; rescue NOR. Benefits lost in 1 week without the drug. Partial impairment NOR in control mice? | ||
| Fluoxetine | Serotonin reuptake inhibitor | Male; 2–5 months; 5 mg/kg daily, intraperitoneally; 2 weeks | Rescue neurogenesis |
| Male, female; P3–P7; 5 mg/kg; P8–P15 10 mg/kg daily subcutaneously | Rescue CFC, neurogenesis at P45 | ||
| Male, female; 5–7 months; 0.2 mg/mL of H2O; 6 weeks | No rescue MWM or BFCN ChAT. Seizures, death | ||
| Male, female; 2 months; 10 mg/kg; H2O; 8 weeks | Rescue OL, Y-maze, LTP | ||
| Pregnant female; E10–E21; 10 mg/kg daily, subcutaneously; male, female offspring tested at P45 | Rescue CFC at P45; rescue neurogenesis | ||
| Physostigmine | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | Male; 4 months, 10 months, and 16 months; 0.05 mg/kg, single injection | Rescue four-arm maze; only at 4 months |
| Galantamine | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | Male, female; 3–6 months; 3 mg/kg daily, intraperitoneally; 10 days | Rescue olfactory test |
| L-DOPS | Norepinephrine prodrug | Male; 6 months; 1 g/kg subcutaneously; 5 hours prior to behavior ×3 days | Rescue CFC |
| Xamoterol | β1 adrenergic receptor partial agonist | Male; 9–12 months; 3 mg/kg subcutaneously; daily for 1 hour before behavior test | Rescue T-maze, CFC, NOR |
| Formoterol | β2 adrenergic agonist | Male; 5–6 months; 2 mg/kg intraperitoneally daily; 4 hours before behavior test | Partial rescue CFC; no rescue neurogenesis |
| Lithium | Inhibit GSK3B; neuroprotection | Female; 12 months; 2.4 g Li/kg chow; 1 month | Rescue neurogenesis |
| Male; 5–6 months; 2.4 g Li/kg chow; 1 month | Rescue CFC, NOR, OL, LTP, and neurogenesis; no rescue T-maze | ||
| Melatonin | Circadian regulator | Male; 5 months; ~0.5 mg daily H2O; 5 months | Improve acquisition MWM Ts65Dn and controls (no probe trial); partial rescue ChAT |
| Male; 6 months; ~0.5 mg daily H2O; 5–6 months | Rescue LTP, neurogenesis | ||
| SAG 1.1 | Sonic hedgehog agonist | Male, female; P0; 20 µg/g, subctuaneous; single injection; tested at 16 weeks | Rescue MWM, LTP; no rescue Y-maze, cerebellar LTD |
| EGCG | Antioxidant; DYRK1A kinase inhibitor | 10 µM, hippocampal slices | Rescue LTP |
| Male; 3 months; 2–3 mg daily, H2O; 30 days | Rescue acquisition MWM (no probe trial) | ||
| Vitamin E | Antioxidant | Male; 4 months; 50 mg/kg daily, chow (0.04% w/w); 4 months and 6 months | Partial rescue WRAM, 8 months; rescue TRKA in BFCN, 10 months |
| Pregnant–lactating female; male offspring (0.1% w/w); 3 months | Partial rescue MWM acquisition; rescue MWM retention | ||
| DAPT | γ-secretase inhibitor | Female; 4 months; 100 mg/kg subcutaneously; twice daily 2 days prior to/during behavior task | Rescue MWM acquisition and probe trial; rescue Aβ levels |
| NAP/SAL | ADNP/ADNF neuroprotective peptides | Male, female; 10 months; 40 µg each oral gavage daily; 9 days | Rescue MWM acquisition and retention |
| Pregnant female; E8–E12; 20 µg each, daily, intraperitoneally. Male and female offspring tested; 8–10 months | Partial rescue acquisition MWM (no probe trial) | ||
| Peptide 6 | Eleven AA from ciliary neurotrophic factor | Female; 11–15 months; 50 nmol daily, implant; 1 month | Marginal improvement MWM acquisition and retention |
| Choline | Precursor of acetylcholine | Pregnant–lactating females; 5 g/kg chow; male offspring; 13–17 months | Rescue WRAM; partial rescue neurogenesis; partial rescue ChAT in BFCN |
| CGP55845 | GABRB antagonist | Male; 2–3 months; acute injection, 2–3 hours; or daily for 3 weeks | Rescue OL, NOR, LTP; no rescue CFC, T-maze |
| Donepezil | Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor | Male; 4 months; 3.3 mg/kg daily, chocolate milk; 4 weeks | No improvement in acquisition on the MWM (no retention test) |
| Piracetam | Unknown | Male; 6 weeks; 75 mg/kg, 150 mg/kg, 300 mg/kg daily intraperitoneally; 8 weeks | No improvement in terms of acquisition on the MWM (no retention test) |
| SGS-111 | Piracetam analog | Male; 4–6 months; 0.5 mg/kg daily subcutaneously; 6 weeks. Pregnant female + male and female offspring; 0.5 mg/kg daily, subcutaneously; P0–P5 months | No improvement in terms of acquisition on the MWM (no retention test) |
| Ethosuximide | Voltage-dependent T-type Ca-channel subunit α1G (KCNJ6) inhibitor | Male; 5 months; 10 mg/kg intraperitoneally; 10 weeks | No improvement in CFC, acquisition on the MWM (no retention test) |
| Gabapentin | Voltage-dependent Ca-channel subunit α2/δ1 inhibitor | Male; 5 months; 150 mg/kg intraperitoneally; 10 weeks | No improvement in CFC, acquisition on the MWM (no retention test) |
| Ro256981 | NMDAR-2B antagonist | Male; 3–6 months; 10 mL/kg intraperitoneally; 2 weeks | No improvement on the Y-maze; increased impairment on the Barnes maze |
Abbreviations: RAM, radial arm maze; WRAM, water radial arm maze; ChAT, choline acetyltransferase; BFCN, basal forebrain cholinergic neurons; GABRA, gamma-aminobutyric acid A receptor; NOR, novel object recognition; PTZ, pentylenetetrazole; LTP, long-term potentiation; MWM, Morris water maze; NMDAR, N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor; CFC, context fear conditioning; P, postnatal; OL, object location; E, embryonic day; SAG 1.1, sonic hedgehog agonist; EGCG, epigallocatechin-3-gallate; TRKA, tyrosine kinase receptor type 1; ADNP, activity-dependent neuroprotective protein; ADNF, activity-dependent neurotrophic factor; AA, amino acid; GABRB, gamma-aminobutyric acid B receptor; ?, unclear if retention was rescued to the level of untreated controls; Li, lithium.
Figure 1Distribution of Hsa21 genes on mouse chromosomes 16, 17, and 10.
Notes: Giemsa-banded Hsa21 is shown at the left. Dp16 (official name, Dp[16]1Yey), Dp17 (official name, Dp[17]1Yey), and Dp10 (official name, Dp[10]1Yey) are the mouse lines created using chromosomal engineering18,19 carrying, respectively, duplications of the complete segments of mouse chromosomes 16, 17, and 10 that are orthologous to Hsa21. The Ts65Dn is trisomic for the telomere proximal segment of mouse chromosome 16, spanning most, but not all, of the Hsa21 orthologous region (as indicated by the horizontal dashed lines) plus the centromere proximal segment of mouse chromosome 17 (indicated by diagonal shading). Numbers in brackets indicate the number of Hsa21 protein-coding genes conserved in each model. Locations of genes discussed in the text are indicated.
Hsa21 orthologs not trisomic in the Ts65Dn that are candidates for drug targets and non-Hsa21 orthologs trisomic in the Ts65Dn that are candidates for contributions to phenotypic features
| Cellular process | Hsa21 gene | Description | Accession number | Mmu chr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Folate pathway | Cystathionine-beta-synthase | NM_000071 | 17 | |
| DNA (cytosine-5-)-methyltransferase 3-like | NM_013369 | 10 | ||
| Solute carrier family 19 (folate transporter), member 1 | NM_194255 | 10 | ||
| Formiminotransferase cyclodeaminase | NM_006657 | 10 | ||
| Protein arginine methyltransferase 2 | NM_206962 | 10 | ||
| Epigenetics | Nuclear receptor interacting protein 1 | NM_003489 | 16 | |
| Cystathionine-beta-synthase | NM_000071 | 17 | ||
| DNA (cytosine-5-)-methyltransferase 3-like | NM_013369 | 10 | ||
| cGMP signaling | Phosphodiesterase 9A | NM_002606 | 17 | |
| Neuroprotection | Trefoil factor 3 (intestinal) | NM_130444 | 17 | |
| APP, Aβ processing | Cystatin B (stefin B) | NM_003226 | 10 | |
| Small ubiquitin-like modifier 3 | NM_000100 | 10 | ||
| S100 calcium binding protein B | NM_006936 | 10 | ||
| Endostatin/ | Collagen, type XVIII, alpha 1 | NM_006272 | 10 | |
| NMDAR activity | Transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily M, member 2 | NM_003307 | 10 | |
| Melatonin action | Transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily M, member 2 | NM_003307 | 10 | |
| Endocytosis | Sorting nexin 9 | NM_016224 | 17 | |
| Signaling endosomes | Dynein, light chain, Tctex-type 1 | NM_006519 | 17 | |
| Phosphodiesterase 10A | NM_001130690 | 17 | ||
| T-cell lymphoma invasion and metastasis 2 | NM_012454 | 17 | ||
| Synaptojanin 2 | NM_003898 | 17 |
Abbreviations: Mmu chr, mouse chromosome; APP, amyloid precursor protein; NMDAR, N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor.