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siRNA screen identifies QPCT as a druggable target for Huntington's disease

Authors :
Nicola P. Caradonna
Giulia Lazzeroni
David C. Rubinsztein
Fiona M. Menzies
Alessia Tarditi
Venkata P. Satagopam
Valentina Porcari
Angeleen Fleming
Reinhard Schneider
Freddy Heitz
Chiara Caramelli
Birte Sönnichsen
Maria Jimenez-Sanchez
Carla Scali
Sara Imarisio
Michael Hannus
Giuseppe Pollio
Wun Lam
Daniela Diamanti
Catherine K. Xu
Eduardo Gonzalez-Couto
Arianna Nencini
Gian Luca Sardone
Andrea Caricasole
Cahir J. O'Kane
Matteo Andreini
Luisa Massai
Guido Marconi
Teresa Ed Dami
Fleming, Angeleen [0000-0003-3721-7126]
O'Kane, Cahir [0000-0002-3488-2078]
Rubinsztein, David [0000-0001-5002-5263]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Bioinformatics Core (R. Schneider Group) [research center]
Source :
Nature chemical biology, Nature chemical biology, 11(5), 347–354. (2015).
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a currently incurable neurodegenerative condition caused by an abnormally expanded polyglutamine tract in huntingtin (HTT). We identified novel modifiers of mutant HTT toxicity by performing a large-scale “druggable genome” siRNA screen in human cultured cells, followed by hit validation in Drosophila. We focused on glutaminyl cyclase (QPCT), which had one of the strongest effects on mutant HTT-induced toxicity and aggregation in the cell-based siRNA screen, and which also rescued these phenotypes in Drosophila. We found that QPCT inhibition induced the levels of the molecular chaperone alpha B-crystallin and reduced the aggregation of diverse proteins. We generated novel QPCT inhibitors using in silico methods followed by in vitro screens, which rescued the HD-related phenotypes in cell, Drosophila and zebrafish HD models. Our data reveal a novel HD druggable target affecting mutant huntingtin aggregation, and provide proof-of-principle for a discovery pipeline from druggable genome screen to drug development.

Details

ISSN :
15524469
Volume :
11
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature chemical biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a16393671b3fab8f3aca4e9d91caa8e6