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Therapeutic targeting of Lyn kinase to treat chorea-acanthocytosis

Authors :
Lisann Pelzl
Gabriela Constantin
Pietro Pucci
Emilia Turco
Immacolata Andolfo
Enrica Caterina Pietronigro
Francesca Garello
Kevin Peikert
Giuseppe Bertini
Enrica Federti
Maria Chiara Monti
Elena Tibaldi
Seth L. Alper
Mario Rosario Buffelli
Erika Lorenzetto
Flora Cozzolino
Angela Amoresano
Andreas Hermann
Alessandro Matte
Carlo Zancanaro
Anna Maria Brunati
Paola Defilippi
Massimiliano Bonifacio
Rainer Ordemann
Enzo Terreno
Adrian Danek
Lucia De Franceschi
Katja Akgün
Angela Siciliano
Federico Del Gallo
Hannes Glaß
Achille Iolascon
Paolo F. Fabene
Tjalf Ziemssen
Anna Illiano
Ruth H. Walker
Florian Lang
Peikert, K.
Federti, E.
Matte, A.
Constantin, G.
Pietronigro, E. C.
Fabene, P. F.
Defilippi, P.
Turco, E.
Del Gallo, F.
Pucci, P.
Amoresano, A.
Illiano, A.
Cozzolino, F.
Monti, M.
Garello, F.
Terreno, E.
Alper, S. L.
Glass, H.
Pelzl, L.
Akgun, K.
Ziemssen, T.
Ordemann, R.
Lang, F.
Brunati, A. M.
Tibaldi, E.
Andolfo, I.
Iolascon, A.
Bertini, G.
Buffelli, M.
Zancanaro, C.
Lorenzetto, E.
Siciliano, A.
Bonifacio, M.
Danek, A.
Walker, R. H.
Hermann, A.
De Franceschi, L.
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications, Acta Neuropathologica Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Chorea-Acanthocytosis (ChAc) is a devastating, little understood, and currently untreatable neurodegenerative disease caused by VPS13A mutations. Based on our recent demonstration that accumulation of activated Lyn tyrosine kinase is a key pathophysiological event in human ChAc cells, we took advantage of Vps13a−/− mice, which phenocopied human ChAc. Using proteomic approach, we found accumulation of active Lyn, γ-synuclein and phospho-tau proteins in Vps13a−/− basal ganglia secondary to impaired autophagy leading to neuroinflammation. Mice double knockout Vps13a−/− Lyn−/− showed normalization of red cell morphology and improvement of autophagy in basal ganglia. We then in vivo tested pharmacologic inhibitors of Lyn: dasatinib and nilotinib. Dasatinib failed to cross the mouse brain blood barrier (BBB), but the more specific Lyn kinase inhibitor nilotinib, crosses the BBB. Nilotinib ameliorates both Vps13a−/− hematological and neurological phenotypes, improving autophagy and preventing neuroinflammation. Our data support the proposal to repurpose nilotinib as new therapeutic option for ChAc patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications, Acta Neuropathologica Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4171e41201ed7b87c0100f3ac8769332