| Literature DB >> 34398313 |
Miguel Lemos1, Gregor K Wenning1, Nadia Stefanova2.
Abstract
Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a challenging neurodegenerative disorder with a difficult and often inaccurate early diagnosis, still lacking effective treatment. It is characterized by a highly variable clinical presentation with parkinsonism, cerebellar ataxia, autonomic dysfunction, and pyramidal signs, with a rapid progression and an aggressive clinical course. The definite MSA diagnosis is only possible post-mortem, when the presence of distinctive oligodendroglial cytoplasmic inclusions (GCIs), mainly composed of misfolded and aggregated α-Synuclein (α-Syn) is demonstrated. The process of α-Syn accumulation and aggregation within oligodendrocytes is accepted one of the main pathological events underlying MSA. However, MSA is considered a multifactorial disorder with multiple pathogenic events acting together including neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, and disrupted neurotrophic support, among others. The discussed here treatment approaches are based on our current understanding of the pathogenesis of MSA and the results of preclinical and clinical therapeutic studies conducted over the last 2 decades. We summarize leading disease-modifying approaches for MSA including targeting α-Syn pathology, modulation of neuroinflammation, and enhancement of neuroprotection. In conclusion, we outline some challenges related to the need to overcome the gap in translation between preclinical and clinical studies towards a successful disease modification in MSA.Entities:
Keywords: Immunotherapy; Multiple system atrophy; Neuroinflammation; Small molecules; Synuclein; Therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34398313 PMCID: PMC8528757 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-021-02406-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
Fig. 1Hypothesis: compartmental redistribution of anti-α-Syn antibodies after specific immunotherapy. PD03 immunization of PLP-α-Syn mice results in significant binding of the specific antibodies in the brain. This antibody binding strongly decreases, while higher levels of free antibodies in the plasma are detected when the specific α-Syn oligomers,—the target of the PD03 antibodies—, are reduced by Anle 138b (Lemos et al 2020). The shift between specific antibody binding and free antibodies in the plasma may be relevant to the definition of immunogenicity in clinical trials. Created with BioRender.com
Fig. 2Experimental therapies in MSA clinical trials to date. Created with BioRender.com
Disease-modifying therapies for MSA currently with preclinical testing and/or analysis in a clinical trial
| Therapeutic approach | Therapy | Mechanisms of action | Clinical trial |
|---|---|---|---|
| Targeting α-Syn pathology | Lithium | Suggested to stimulate autophagy | A phase II clinical trial had to be discontinued due to adverse side effects (NCT0099767) |
| Rifampicin | Antibiotic that showed reduced β-amyloid and α-Syn aggregation in MSA mice (Ubhi et al. | A phase III trial showed no effects of rifampicin on disease progression (NCT01287221) | |
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | A poly-phenol found in green tea which reduces aggregation and toxicity of α-Syn oligomers | A phase III trial showed no effects of EGCG on disease progression (NCT02008721) | |
| Anle138b | Small molecule that modulates oligomerization of α-Syn in MSA mice (Heras-Garvin et al. | A phase I clinical trial with Anle138b in healthy patients was successfully completed (NCT04208152) and confirmed its safety | |
ATH434 (also PBT434) | ATH434 is a moderate iron chelator that reduces α-Syn accumulation in MSA mice (Heras-Garvin et al. | A phase I clinical trial of ATH434 in healthy volunteers has been completed demonstrating the safety of the compound (ACTRN12618000541202) | |
| Active immunotherapy (PD01 and PD03) | Active immunotherapy targeting oligomeric α-Syn in MSA mice (Mandler et al. | A phase I clinical trial suggested good immunogenicity, safety and tolerability in MSA patients (NCT02270489) | |
| Passive immunotherapy (rec47) | Specific antibodies are delivered to target pathological α-Syn in MSA mice (Kallab et al. | N/A | |
| Anti-sense oligonucleotides (ASOs) | Suppression of the production of α-Syn and therefore reduce its intracellular toxic accumulation | A phase I study to assess safety and tolerability of BIIB101, an antisense oligonucleotide targeting | |
| Monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA) | MPLA is a selective TLR4 agonist with low pro-inflammatory effect and enhancement of microglial clearance of α-Syn in MSA mice (Venezia et al. | N/A | |
| Molecular tweezer (CLR01) | CLR01 is a small molecule that binds to lysine residues and prevents the formation of protein assemblies in MSA mice (Herrera-Vaquero et al. | N/A | |
| VX-765 | Caspase-1 inhibitor that inhibits α-Syn C-terminal truncation in MSA mice (Bassil et al. | N/A | |
| Nilotinib | c-Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor enhancing autophagic α-Syn degradation; fails to prevent pathology in MSA mice (Lopez-Cuina et al. | Pre-clinical results did not support the development of a clinical trial | |
| Rapamycin | Enhances autophagic α-Syn clearance | A phase II, double-blind, futility trial was recently completed (NCT03589976) | |
| Reducing neuroinflammation | Intravenous immunoglobulins | General anti-inflammatory effect | A single-arm interventional, single-center, open-label pilot study (NCT00750867); safe, feasible and well tolerated, no convincing efficacy |
| Minocycline | A tetracycline antibiotic with brain penetrance, reduces neuroinflammation and leads to neuroprotection when therapy is initiated before motor symptom onset (Stefanova et al. | Phase III trial reduced microglial activation in MSA patients but failed to induce changes on disease progression (NCT00146809) | |
| Fluoxetine | Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor that reduces neuroinflammation and leads to neuroprotection in MSA mice (Ubhi et al. | Phase II clinical trial in MSA patients did not support the progress to a phase III clinical trial (NCT01146548) | |
| Verdiperstat (BHV3241, previously AZD3241) | Oral myeloperoxidase (MPO) inhibitor that reduces neuroinflammation; shows neuroprotection only after early start of therapy in MSA mice, not efficient when started after motor symptom onset (Stefanova et al. | Phase III clinical trial recently completed (NCT03952806), no results published yet | |
| Neuroprotective therapies | Recombinant human growth hormone | General trophic effects | A double-blind, placebo-controlled study (Holmberg et al. |
| Riluzole | Benzothiazole with proposed anti-excitotoxic activity, blocking of voltage dependent sodium-channels, free-radical scavenging, anti-apoptotic and neurotrophic effects and inhibition of protein aggregation, borderline effect in toxin models of striatonigral degeneration (Scherfler et al. | A Phase III study on MSA patients showed no effect on disease progression (NCT00211224) | |
| Rasagiline | Irreversible inhibitor of monoamine oxidase-B with anti-apoptotic effect through proposed neurotrophic support, neuroprotection in MSA mice (Stefanova et al. | A phase II trial in MSA patients did not show significant benefits when used in a clinically applicable dose (NCT00977665) | |
| Exenatide (Exendin-4) | Anti-diabetic drug and a glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue targeting brain insulin resistance showing protection of dopaminergic neurons but no motor improvement in MSA mice (Bassil et al. | Phase II clinical trial recently completed (NCT04431713), no results published yet | |
| Sodium phenylbutyrate | Unspecific histone deacetylase, shows neuroprotection and lowering of α-Syn through modified epigenetic control in MSA mice (Sturm et al. | N/A | |
| Benztropine | Anti-cholinergic drug acting on oligodendrocytes and enhancing re-myelination, efficient in MSA mice (Ettle et al. | N/A | |
| AAV2-GDNF | Neurotrophic support leading to neuroprotection in MSA mice (Ubhi et al. | Phase I clinical trial on GDNF gene therapy in progress (NCT04680065) |
N/A not available