| Literature DB >> 28933412 |
Maria Francisca Coutinho1, Juliana Inês Santos2, Liliana Matos3, Sandra Alves4.
Abstract
Lysosomal storage diseases are a group of rare genetic disorders characterized by the accumulation of storage molecules in late endosomes/lysosomes. Most of them result from mutations in genes encoding for the catabolic enzymes that ensure intralysosomal digestion. Conventional therapeutic options include enzyme replacement therapy, an approach targeting the functional loss of the enzyme by injection of a recombinant one. Even though this is successful for some diseases, it is mostly effective for peripheral manifestations and has no impact on neuropathology. The development of alternative therapeutic approaches is, therefore, mandatory, and striking innovations including the clinical development of pharmacological chaperones and gene therapy are currently under evaluation. Most of them, however, have the same underlying rationale: an attempt to provide or enhance the activity of the missing enzyme to re-establish substrate metabolism to a level that is consistent with a lack of progression and/or return to health. Here, we will focus on the one approach which has a different underlying principle: substrate reduction therapy (SRT), whose uniqueness relies on the fact that it acts upstream of the enzymatic defect, decreasing storage by downregulating its biosynthetic pathway. Special attention will be given to the most recent advances in the field, introducing the concept of genetic SRT (gSRT), which is based on the use of RNA-degrading technologies (RNA interference and single stranded antisense oligonucleotides) to promote efficient substrate reduction by decreasing its synthesis rate.Entities:
Keywords: Gaucher disease (GD); Sanfilippo syndrome); combination therapy; mucopolysaccharidosis type III (MPS III; substrate reduction therapy (SRT)
Year: 2016 PMID: 28933412 PMCID: PMC5456330 DOI: 10.3390/diseases4040033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Summary table of clinical trials currently active for selected small interfering RNA (siRNA) and antisense therapeutics (adapted from [10]).
| Drug | Target | Condition | Phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCR-MYC | Myc | Solid tumors Hepatocellular carcinoma | I | Recruiting |
| I/II | Recruiting | |||
| ALN-TTRSC (Revusiran) | Transthyretin | TTR-mediated familial amyloidotic cardiomyopathy | I | Completed |
| II | Active | |||
| III | Active | |||
| ALN-CC5 | Complement component C5 | Paroxysmal nocturnal Hemoglobinuria | I/II | Active |
| ALN-AS1 | ALAS-1 | Acute intermittent porphyria | I | Recruiting |
| ALN-PCSSC | PCSK9 | Hypercholesterolemia | I | Completed |
| ALN-TTR02 (Patisiran) | Transthyretin | TTR-mediated amyloidosis | II | Active |
| III | Active | |||
| ALN-AT3SC | Antithrombin | Hemophilia A/B | I | Recruiting |
| TKM-080301 | Polo-like kinase 1 | Hepatocellular carcinoma Neuroendocrine tumors | I | Active |
| I/II | Recruiting | |||
| TKM-100802 | Ebola genome | Ebola virus | I/II | Terminated |
| QPI-1007 | Caspase 2 | Primary angle-closure glaucoma | II | Completed |
| RXI-109 | CTGF | Hypertrophic scar keloid excision surgery | II | Completed |
| II | Completed | |||
| Atu027 | PKN3 | Pancreatic ductal carcinoma | I/II | Completed |
| SYL040012 | Β2-adrenergic receptor | Ocular hypertension | II | Completed |
| Mipomersen * | ApoB 100 | Heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia atherosclerosis | III | Completed |
| III | Completed | |||
| ISIS-TTRRX | Transthyretin | Familial amyloid polyneuropathy | III | Active |
| ISIS-ApoC-IIIRX | ApoCIII | Hypertriglyceridemia | II | Completed |
| ISIS-DMPKRX | DMPK | Myotonic dystrophy type 1 | I/II | Recruiting |
| ISIS APO(a)-LRX | Apoliprotein (a) | Elevated lipoprotein (a) | I | Completed |
| II | Completed | |||
| Curtirsen | Clusterin | Non-small cell lung cancer | III | Recruiting |
| III | Active |
* Already approved by the U.S. FDA under the commercial designation Kynamro®.
Figure 1Natural process and therapeutic mechanism of RNAi (RNA interference).