| Literature DB >> 29070699 |
Evangelos D Michelakis1, Vikram Gurtu2, Linda Webster2, Gareth Barnes3, Geoffrey Watson3, Luke Howard4, John Cupitt3, Ian Paterson2, Richard B Thompson5, Kelvin Chow5, Declan P O'Regan6, Lan Zhao3, John Wharton3, David G Kiely7, Adam Kinnaird2, Aristeidis E Boukouris2, Chris White8, Jayan Nagendran8, Darren H Freed8, Stephen J Wort9, J Simon R Gibbs4, Martin R Wilkins10.
Abstract
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive vascular disease with a high mortality rate. It is characterized by an occlusive vascular remodeling due to a pro-proliferative and antiapoptotic environment in the wall of resistance pulmonary arteries (PAs). Proliferating cells exhibit a cancer-like metabolic switch where mitochondrial glucose oxidation is suppressed, whereas glycolysis is up-regulated as the major source of adenosine triphosphate production. This multifactorial mitochondrial suppression leads to inhibition of apoptosis and downstream signaling promoting proliferation. We report an increase in pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK), an inhibitor of the mitochondrial enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH, the gatekeeping enzyme of glucose oxidation) in the PAs of human PAH compared to healthy lungs. Treatment of explanted human PAH lungs with the PDK inhibitor dichloroacetate (DCA) ex vivo activated PDH and increased mitochondrial respiration. In a 4-month, open-label study, DCA (3 to 6.25 mg/kg b.i.d.) administered to patients with idiopathic PAH (iPAH) already on approved iPAH therapies led to reduction in mean PA pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance and improvement in functional capacity, but with a range of individual responses. Lack of ex vivo and clinical response was associated with the presence of functional variants of SIRT3 and UCP2 that predict reduced protein function. Impaired function of these proteins causes PDK-independent mitochondrial suppression and pulmonary hypertension in mice. This first-in-human trial of a mitochondria-targeting drug in iPAH demonstrates that PDK is a druggable target and offers hemodynamic improvement in genetically susceptible patients, paving the way for novel precision medicine approaches in this disease.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29070699 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aao4583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956