| Literature DB >> 32582709 |
Rongchen Dai1, Zeting Wu2, Hang Yin Chu1, Jun Lu1,3, Aiping Lyu1, Jin Liu1, Ge Zhang1.
Abstract
Cathepsin K (CatK) is one of the most potent proteases in lysosomal cysteine proteases family, of which main function is to mediate bone resorption. Currently, CatK is among the most attractive targets for anti-osteoporosis drug development. Although many pharmaceutical companies are working on the development of selective inhibitors for CatK, there is no FDA approved drug till now. Odanacatib (ODN) developed by Merck & Co. is the only CatK inhibitor candidate which demonstrated high therapeutic efficacy in patients with postmenopausal osteoporosis in Phase III clinical trials. Unfortunately, the development of ODN was finally terminated due to the cardio-cerebrovascular adverse effects. Therefore, it arouses concerns on the undesirable CatK inhibition in non-bone sites. It is known that CatK has far-reaching actions throughout various organs besides bone. Many studies have also demonstrated the involvement of CatK in various diseases beyond the musculoskeletal system. This review not only summarized the functional roles of CatK in bone and beyond bone, but also discussed the potential relevance of the CatK action beyond bone to the adverse effects of inhibiting CatK in non-bone sites.Entities:
Keywords: Cathepsin K; Cathepsin K inhibitor; bone resorption; cardiovascular diseases; lung fibrosis; osteoarthritis; osteoclast; osteoporosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32582709 PMCID: PMC7287012 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Role of CatK in bone.
| Bone | Pycnodysostosis | Pycnodysostosis-related mutant CatK proteins were incapable of degrading type I collagen. All the CatK mutations identified in Pycno patients were loss-of-function mutations that appeared to eliminate its enzymatic activity. | |
| Postmenopausal osteoporosis | The serum CatK levels were significantly elevated in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis, while they were reduced after the patients were treated with bisphosphonates, the established anti-resorptive agents. | ||
| OA | The increased expression and collagenase activity of CatK could contribute to the cartilage matrix degradation in OA progression. CatK is currently among the promising therapeutic target candidates for the development of disease-modifying osteoarthritic drugs. | ||
| RA | The serum CatK levels were increased in patients with active longstanding RA, which were significantly correlated with the severity of joint destruction. CatK deficiency largely prevented the cartilage erosion and bone destruction and reduced the joint inflammation in mice with TNF-α-mediated arthritis. Inhibition of CatK could suppress the cartilage degradation as well as the systemic and local bone loss to prevent joint destruction in preclinical RA models. |
Role of CatK beyond bone.
| Central nervous system | AIS | CatK is required for maintaining the BBB integrity while the absence of CatK activity might result in higher risk of rtPA-induced HT after cerebral ischemia. | |
| CA | Inhibiting CatK could inhibit the excessive ECM degradation, and thus might be beneficial for preventing CA progression. | ||
| CSDH | The CatK levels were increased while the Cystatin C levels were decreased when compared with normal controls, suggesting that CatK is highly relevant with the development of CSDH. | ||
| Schizophrenia | The CatK expression was markedly upregulated in postmortem brains of patients suffering from schizophrenia who received long-term treatment with neuroleptics. This upregulation of CatK might contribute to the altered opioid levels in brains of schizophrenics probably through processing β-endorphin to release met-enkephalin. | ||
| Cardiovascular system | Cardiac dysfunction | CatK deficiency are beneficial to cardiac dysfunction, including the obesity-associated cardiac hypertrophy, the pressure overload–induced cardiac hypertrophy, the diabetes-induced cardiac anomalies and the aging-induced cardiac dysfunction. | |
| MI | The CatK-deficient mice exhibited worsen post-MI cardiac function along with increased collagen deposition and fibrosis, enhanced cardiac cell death, and reduced cardiac cell proliferation than the wildtype controls. | ||
| Atherosclerosis | The deficiency of CatK resulted in the reduced number of advanced lesions as well as decreased individual advanced plaque area but increased number of initial plaques in the CatK-deficient apoE–/– mice as compared with the CatK-intact apoE–/–. | ||
| Respiratory system | Lung fibrosis | The pulmonary fibroblast from CatK-deficient mice showed decreased cathepsin-mediated collagenolytic activity as compared with those from wildtype mice, whereas pulmonary fibroblast from patients with lung fibrosis exhibited enhanced CatK activity. | |
| Other organs and systems | Autoimmune diseases | The lack of CatK activity could affect the innate immune response to pathogen DNA by compromising TLR9 signaling in DCs, leading to the attenuated induction of T helper 17 cells without affecting the antigen-presenting ability of DCs. | |
| Physiological function of thyroid | CatK is expressed by the thyroid epithelial cells and secreted into the follicular lumen for mediating the extracellular proteolysis of the prohormone TG, which is the essential process for the thyroxine liberation. | ||
| Overweight/obese | The adipogenesis was enhanced by CatK overexpression but retarded after CatK deficiency. Body weight gained after high-fat diet was remarkably decreased in mice with either genetic knockout or pharmacological inhibition of CatK when compared with the controls. |