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Arginine is a disease modifier for polyQ disease models that stabilizes polyQ protein conformation

Authors :
Mari Suzuki
Masahisa Katsuno
Keiji Wada
Yasuo Takahashi
Hiroshi Yamane
Yoshitaka Nagai
Akiko Takeda
Kei Watase
Hiroaki Adachi
Toshihide Takeuchi
Hiroko Yagihara
Eiko N. Minakawa
Chiyomi Ito
Helena Akiko Popiel
Toshiaki Takahashi
Kentaro Shiraki
Yuko Saito
Hideki Mochizuki
Masayoshi Tada
Yuma Okamoto
Kazuhiro Yamamoto
Daisaku Ozawa
Tatsushi Toda
Gen Sobue
Hiromi Fujita
Osamu Onodera
Yuji Saitoh
Source :
Brain. 143:1811-1825
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020.

Abstract

The polyglutamine (polyQ) diseases are a group of inherited neurodegenerative diseases that include Huntington’s disease, various spinocerebellar ataxias, spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, and dentatorubral pallidoluysian atrophy. They are caused by the abnormal expansion of a CAG repeat coding for the polyQ stretch in the causative gene of each disease. The expanded polyQ stretches trigger abnormal β-sheet conformational transition and oligomerization followed by aggregation of the polyQ proteins in the affected neurons, leading to neuronal toxicity and neurodegeneration. Disease-modifying therapies that attenuate both symptoms and molecular pathogenesis of polyQ diseases remain an unmet clinical need. Here we identified arginine, a chemical chaperone that facilitates proper protein folding, as a novel compound that targets the upstream processes of polyQ protein aggregation by stabilizing the polyQ protein conformation. We first screened representative chemical chaperones using an in vitro polyQ aggregation assay, and identified arginine as a potent polyQ aggregation inhibitor. Our in vitro and cellular assays revealed that arginine exerts its anti-aggregation property by inhibiting the toxic β-sheet conformational transition and oligomerization of polyQ proteins before the formation of insoluble aggregates. Arginine exhibited therapeutic effects on neurological symptoms and protein aggregation pathology in Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila, and two different mouse models of polyQ diseases. Arginine was also effective in a polyQ mouse model when administered after symptom onset. As arginine has been safely used for urea cycle defects and for mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acid and stroke syndrome patients, and efficiently crosses the blood–brain barrier, a drug-repositioning approach for arginine would enable prompt clinical application as a promising disease-modifier drug for the polyQ diseases.

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Volume :
143
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd4f73ca15a62ebe41ff1064b654b1cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa115