| Literature DB >> 35328914 |
Luciana Rigoli1, Valerio Caruso2, Giuseppina Salzano1, Fortunato Lombardo1.
Abstract
Wolfram syndrome 1 (WS1) is a rare neurodegenerative disease transmitted in an autosomal recessive mode. It is characterized by diabetes insipidus (DI), diabetes mellitus (DM), optic atrophy (OA), and sensorineural hearing loss (D) (DIDMOAD). The clinical picture may be complicated by other symptoms, such as urinary tract, endocrinological, psychiatric, and neurological abnormalities. WS1 is caused by mutations in the WFS1 gene located on chromosome 4p16 that encodes a transmembrane protein named wolframin. Many studies have shown that wolframin regulates some mechanisms of ER calcium homeostasis and therefore plays a role in cellular apoptosis. More than 200 mutations are responsible for WS1. However, abnormal phenotypes of WS with or without DM, inherited in an autosomal dominant mode and associated with one or more WFS1 mutations, have been found. Furthermore, recessive Wolfram-like disease without DM has been described. The prognosis of WS1 is poor, and the death occurs prematurely. Although there are no therapies that can slow or stop WS1, a careful clinical monitoring can help patients during the rapid progression of the disease, thus improving their quality of life. In this review, we describe natural history and etiology of WS1 and suggest criteria for a most pertinent approach to the diagnosis and clinical follow up. We also describe the hallmarks of new therapies for WS1.Entities:
Keywords: WFS1; Wolfram syndrome 1; diabetes insipidus; diabetes mellitus; new therapies for Wolfram syndrome 1; optic atrophy; sensorineural deafness
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328914 PMCID: PMC8949990 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19063225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Functional alterations of wolframin according to type of WFS1 mutations.
| Class | Alterations of Wolframin Function | |
|---|---|---|
| A | A1 | Wolframin depletion due to degradation of |
| A2 | Wolframin depletion due to mRNA and protein degradation | |
| A3 | Wolframin depletion due to degradation of protein | |
| B | Reduced expression of a deficient wolframin | |
| C | Expression of a deficient wolframin |
Figure 1Genotypic classification of WFSI mutations.
Clinical features of patients with Wolfram syndrome 1.
| Major Clinical Features | Age at Diagnosis | Percentage of WS1 Patients with a Single Disorder |
|---|---|---|
| Diabetes insipidus | 14 years (3 months–40 years) | 37.7% |
| Diabetes mellitus | 6 years (3 weeks–16 years) | 98.2% |
| Optic atrophy | 11 years (6 weeks–19 years) | 82.1% |
| Sensorineural hearing loss | 12.5 years (5–39 years) | 48.2% |
| Neurological and autonomic disorders (central apnea, ataxia, dysphagia, areflexia, epilepsy, decreased ability to taste and detect odors, headaches, orthostatic hypotension, hyperpyrexia, hypothermia, constipation, gastroparesis) | 16 years (5–44 years) | 17.1% |
| Urinary tract complications (neurogenic bladder, bladder incontinence, urinary tract infections) | 20 years (13–33 years) | 19.4% |
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| Psychiatric symptoms (anxiety, panic attacks, depression, mood swings, sleep abnormalities, psychosis) | 20.5 years (17–23 years) | 44.4% |
| Endocrinological disorders (hypogonadism, deficient growth hormone secretion, corticotropin deficiency, delayed menarche in female) | 8 years (7–9 years) | 6.6% |
Therapeutic strategies proposed for Wolfram syndrome 1.
| Improvement of β-cell functions by action on ER stress cell. Stabilization of native conformation during folding of mutant | |
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| Calpain inhibitor XI | Normalization resting cytosolic calcium [ |
| Ibudilast | Block of the cleavage of cAMP, which interacts with the calcium pathway [ |
| Dantrolene | Blockade of the ryanodine receptor in the ER membrane and subsequent suppression of calcium efflux from ER to the cytosol [ |
| Drugs that activate SERCA ATPase | Maintenance of high levels of ER calcium [ |
| Pioglitazione | Inhibition of IPR3-mediated release of calcium from the ER (91) |
| Rapamycin | Reduction of the cytoplasmic calcium levels [ |
| Carbachol | Mobilization of calcium intracellular, enhancement of glucose- |
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| Valproic acid | Protection against apoptosis, induction of |
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| Liraglutide, exenatide, semaglutide | Prevention and suppression of ER stress-mediated cell death. [ |
| Inhibitors of dipeptyl peptidase- 4 (DPP-4): Gemigliptin, | Increase of GLP-1 levels [ |
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| Restoration of mitochondrial functions [ |
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| AAV rescue by WT | Transfection of wild-type |
| CRISPR/Cas9 mutant WFS1 | Replacement of mutant |
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| Cell-replacement therapy | Replacement of WS1 damaged tissues, such as pancreatic β-cells, retinal |
| Regenerative gene delivery (MANF) | Activation of the proliferation of pancreatic β-cells, protection against ER stress mediated apoptosis, and suppression of neurodegeneration [ |
Development stages of therapeutic strategies proposed for Wolfram syndrome 1.
| Chemical Chaperones | Phases of the Therapeutic Approaches |
|---|---|
| AMX0035 | Clinical phase |
| HTS (high-throughput screening) | Under study |
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| NCS1/Ibudilast | Preclinical studies |
| Dantrolene | Phase Ib/IIa non-randomized, open-label, clinical trial (Clinical Trials.gov identifier: NCT028029268) |
| 2end Generation Calcium Stabilizer JTV-519 | Clinical phase |
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| Valproic acid | Phase III randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (Clinical Trials.gov identifier: NCT03717909). |
| GLP-1R agonists/liraglutide | Clinical trial off-label phase I |
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| AAV rescue by WT | Preclinical studies |
| CRISPR/Cas9 mutant WFS1 | Preclinical studies |
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| Cell-replacement therapy | Preclinical studies |
| Regenerative gene delivery (MANF) | Preclinical studies |