| Literature DB >> 27083890 |
Ryan D Geraets1,2, Seung yon Koh1, Michelle L Hastings3, Tammy Kielian4, David A Pearce1,2, Jill M Weimer5,6.
Abstract
The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are a family of autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorders that annually affect 1:100,000 live births worldwide. This family of diseases results from mutations in one of 14 different genes that share common clinical and pathological etiologies. Clinically, the diseases are subcategorized into infantile, late-infantile, juvenile and adult forms based on their age of onset. Though the disease phenotypes may vary in their age and order of presentation, all typically include progressive visual deterioration and blindness, cognitive impairment, motor deficits and seizures. Pathological hallmarks of NCLs include the accumulation of storage material or ceroid in the lysosome, progressive neuronal degeneration and massive glial activation. Advances have been made in genetic diagnosis and counseling for families. However, comprehensive treatment programs that delay or halt disease progression have been elusive. Current disease management is primarily targeted at controlling the symptoms rather than "curing" the disease. Recognizing the growing need for transparency and synergistic efforts to move the field forward, this review will provide an overview of the therapeutic approaches currently being pursued in preclinical and clinical trials to treat different forms of NCL as well as provide insight to novel therapeutic approaches in development for the NCLs.Entities:
Keywords: Antisense oligonucleotides; Autophagy modulators; Batten disease; Enzyme replacement therapy; Gene therapy; Lysosomal modulators; Palmitoyl-Protein Thioesterase 1; RNA modulating therapies; Stem cell therapy; Translational research; Tripeptidyl peptidase 1
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27083890 PMCID: PMC4833901 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-016-0414-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Emerging therapeutic approaches for the Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses. Diagramatic overview of therapeutic approaches being tested in preclinical and clinical trials
Past and present NCL clinical trials. Currently, there are only eight NCL clinical trials in existence (clinicaltrials.gov). Most of the trials focus on the treatment of either INCL or LINCL
| Trial ID | NCL Form(s) | Therapeutic Approach | Proposed Mechanism of Action | Preclinical Studies | Trial Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01399047 | JNCL |
| Reduction in neuroinflammation and production of autoantibodies | Seehafer 2011 [ | Recruiting |
| NCT01161576 | LINCL |
| Genetically engineer cells to produce non-mutated TPP1 | Sondhi 2007 [ | Recruiting |
| NCT01414985 | LINCL |
| Genetically engineer cells to produce non-mutated TPP1 | Sondhi 2007 [ | Recruiting |
| NCT01907087 | LINCL |
| Source of recombinant functional TPP1 in which diseased cell can uptake and utilize | Vuillemenot 2014 [ | Active |
| NCT00151216 | LINCL |
| Genetically engineer cells to produce non-mutated TPP1 | Sondhi 2005 [ | Active |
| NCT00337636 | INCL, LINCL |
| Similar to ERT but, human CNS stem cells act as the source of functional PPT1 and TPP1 | Tamaki 2009 [ | Complete |
| NCT00028262 | INCL |
| Clears lysosome of storage material | Zhang 2001 [ | Complete |
| NCT01238315 | INCL, LINCL |
| Similar to ERT but, human CNS stem cells act the source of functional PPT1 and TPP1 | Tamaki 2009 [ | Withdrawn |
Bold words indicate the therapeutic approach
Fig. 2Nonsense suppression therapies in combination with nonsense mediated decay inhibitors. a Transcripts containing premature termination codons (PTC) are targeted for degradation via nonsense mediated decay (NMD) resulting in decreased protein production. However, transcripts that escape NMD predominately lead to the translation of truncated proteins. b The negative effect of PTCs, truncated protein production, can be suppressed with PTC suppressors and NMD inhibitors. NMD inhibitors prevent NMD resulting in a larger portion of PTC containing transcripts. PTC suppressors promote the translation of PTC containing transcripts into full-length proteins. When PTC suppressors and NMD inhibitors are utilized in combination, the outcome is synergistic thus resulting in an increased abundance of full-length proteins