Potential Alzheimer's disease drug slows
damage and symptoms in animal model
March 17, 2012– A study published this week
in theJournal of Neuroscienceshows that the
compound epothilone D (EpoD) is effective in
preventing further neurological damage and
improving cognitive performance in a mouse
model of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
The results establish how the drug might be
used in early-stage AD patients.
Investigators from the Perelman School of
Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,
led by first author Bin Zhang, MD, PhD,
senior research investigator, and senior
author Kurt R. Brunden, PhD, Director of
Drug Discovery at the Center for
Neurodegenerative Disease Research (CNDR),
administered EpoD to aged mice that had
memory deficits and inclusions within their
brains that resemble the tangles formed by
misfolded tau protein, a hallmark of AD.
In nerve cells, tau normally stabilizes
structures called microtubules, the
molecular railroad tracks upon which
cellular cargo is transported. Tangles may
compromise microtubule stability, with
resulting damage to nerve cells.
A drug that could increase microtubule
stability might improve nerve-cell function
in AD and other diseases where tangles form
in the brain.
EpoD acts by the same
microtubule-stabilizing mechanism as the
FDA-approved cancer drug paclitaxel
(Taxol™).
These drugs prevent cancer cell
proliferation by over-stabilizing
specialized microtubules involved in the
separation of chromosomes during the process
of cell division. However, the Penn
researchers previously demonstrated that
EpoD, unlike paclitaxel, readily enters the
brain and so may be useful for treating AD
and related disorders.
After three months of receiving EpoD,
additional tau clumps did not form in the
brains of the aged AD mice, and nerve-cell
function was increased compared to the AD
mice that did not receive drug.
What's more, the EpoD-treated mice showed
improvements in learning and memory.
Importantly, the doses of EpoD that resulted
in these benefits were much lower than had
previously been used in Phase II clinical
testing of EpoD in cancer patients.
The investigators observed no side-effects –
including the suppression of the immune
system and peripheral nerve damage -- in the
transgenic mice that received EpoD.
These results suggest that low doses of EpoD
might have therapeutic benefit in AD and
related neurodegenerative diseases, such as
frontotemporal lobar degeneration or
progressive supranuclear palsy, where
tangles are the primary brain pathology.
Co-authors Virginia M.-Y. Lee, PhD, CNDR
director, and John Trojanowski, MD, PhD,
director of the Institute on Aging at Penn
and CNDR co-director, introduced the concept
of using microtubule-stabilizing drugs over
15 years ago to counteract tangles of tau
and compensate for the loss of normal tau
function.
The Penn CNDR researchers, in collaboration
with co-authors Amos B. Smith, III, PhD, the
Rhodes Thompson Professor of Chemistry, and
Carlo Ballatore, PhD, from the Penn
Department of Chemistry, previously
identified EpoD as a lead
microtubule-stabilizing agent for evaluation
in AD mouse models after characterizing
several members of the epothilone family of
compounds. Unlike many
microtubule-stabilizing compounds, EpoD
readily enters the brain, where it appears
to persist for a much longer time than in
the blood. This feature may explain why low
doses were both effective and safe in the
mouse model of AD.
The work significantly extends an earlier
study published in theJournal of
Neuroscience in October 2010.
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The research was funded by the National
Institute on Aging and the Marian S. Ware
Alzheimer Program.