Wolfram syndrome: new pathophysiological insights and therapeutic strategies.

Therapeutic advances in rare disease Pub Date : 2021-08-16 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26330040211039518
Ratnakar Mishra, Benson S Chen, Prachi Richa, Patrick Yu-Wai-Man
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Wolfram Syndrome (WS) is an ultra-rare, progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized by early-onset diabetes mellitus and irreversible loss of vision, secondary to optic nerve degeneration. Visual loss in WS is an important cause of registrable blindness in children and young adults and the pathological hallmark is the preferential loss of retinal ganglion cells within the inner retina. In addition to optic atrophy, affected individuals frequently develop variable combinations of neurological, endocrinological, and psychiatric complications. The majority of patients carry recessive mutations in the WFS1 (4p16.1) gene that encodes for a multimeric transmembrane protein, wolframin, embedded within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). An increasingly recognised subgroup of patients harbor dominant WFS1 mutations that usually cause a milder phenotype, which can be limited to optic atrophy. Wolframin is a ubiquitous protein with high levels of expression in retinal, neuronal, and muscle tissues. It is a multifunctional protein that regulates a host of cellular functions, in particular the dynamic interaction with mitochondria at mitochondria-associated membranes. Wolframin has been implicated in several crucial cellular signaling pathways, including insulin signaling, calcium homeostasis, and the regulation of apoptosis and the ER stress response. There is currently no cure for WS; management remains largely supportive. This review will cover the clinical, genetic, and pathophysiological features of WS, with a specific focus on disease models and the molecular pathways that could serve as potential therapeutic targets. The current landscape of therapeutic options will also be discussed in the context of the latest evidence, including the pipeline for repurposed drugs and gene therapy.

Plain language summary: Wolfram syndrome - disease mechanisms and treatment options Wolfram syndrome (WS) is an ultra-rare genetic disease that causes diabetes mellitus and progressive loss of vision from early childhood. Vision is affected in WS because of damage to a specialized type of cells in the retina, known as retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), which converge at the back of the eye to form the optic nerve. The optic nerve is the fast-conducting cable that transmits visual information from the eye to the vision processing centers within the brain. As RGCs are lost, the optic nerve degenerates and it becomes pale in appearance (optic atrophy). Although diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy are the main features of WS, some patients can develop more severe problems because the brain and other organs, such as the kidneys and the bladder, are also affected. The majority of patients with WS carry spelling mistakes (mutations) in the WFS1 gene, which is located on the short arm of chromosome 4 (4p16.1). This gene is highly expressed in the eye and in the brain, and it encodes for a protein located within a compartment of the cell known as the endoplasmic reticulum. For reasons that still remain unclear, WFS1 mutations preferentially affect RGCs, accounting for the prominent visual loss in this genetic disorder. There is currently no effective treatment to halt or slow disease progression and management remains supportive, including the provision of visual aids and occupational rehabilitation. Research into WS has been limited by its relative rarity and the inability to get access to eye and brain tissues from affected patients. However, major advances in our understanding of this disease have been made recently by making use of more accessible cells from patients, such as skin cells (fibroblasts), or animal models, such as mice and zebrafish. This review summarizes the mechanisms by which WFS1 mutations affect cells, impairing their function and eventually leading to their premature loss. The possible treatment strategies to block these pathways are also discussed, with a particular focus on drug repurposing (i.e., using drugs that are already approved for other diseases) and gene therapy (i.e., replacing or repairing the defective WFS1 gene).

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Wolfram综合征:新的病理生理学见解和治疗策略。
Wolfram综合征(WS)是一种极为罕见的进行性神经退行性疾病,其特征是早发性糖尿病和不可逆的视力丧失,继发于视神经变性。WS的视觉损失是儿童和年轻人可登记失明的重要原因,其病理标志是视网膜内部视网膜神经节细胞的优先损失。除了视神经萎缩外,受影响的个体还经常出现神经、内分泌和精神并发症的各种组合。大多数患者在WFS1(4p16.1)基因中携带隐性突变,该基因编码嵌入内质网(ER)内的多聚体跨膜蛋白wolframin。一个越来越被认可的亚组患者携带显性WFS1突变,通常会导致较轻的表型,这可能局限于视神经萎缩。Wolframin是一种普遍存在的蛋白质,在视网膜、神经元和肌肉组织中具有高水平的表达。它是一种多功能蛋白质,调节许多细胞功能,特别是与线粒体相关膜上的线粒体的动态相互作用。Wolframin与几个关键的细胞信号通路有关,包括胰岛素信号通路、钙稳态、细胞凋亡和ER应激反应的调节。目前还没有治愈WS的方法;管理层仍然在很大程度上给予支持。这篇综述将涵盖WS的临床、遗传和病理生理特征,特别关注可能作为潜在治疗靶点的疾病模型和分子途径。目前的治疗方案也将在最新证据的背景下进行讨论,包括重新利用药物和基因治疗的管道。简明语言总结:Wolfram综合征-疾病机制和治疗选择Wolfram综合症(WS)是一种极为罕见的遗传性疾病,可导致糖尿病和儿童早期进行性视力丧失。WS的视力受到影响,因为视网膜中一种特殊类型的细胞受损,称为视网膜神经节细胞(RGCs),这些细胞聚集在眼睛后部形成视神经。视神经是将视觉信息从眼睛传输到大脑内视觉处理中心的快速传导电缆。随着RGCs的丢失,视神经退化,外观变苍白(视神经萎缩)。尽管糖尿病和视神经萎缩是WS的主要特征,但一些患者可能会出现更严重的问题,因为大脑和其他器官,如肾脏和膀胱,也会受到影响。大多数WS患者的WFS1基因位于4号染色体的短臂(4p16.1)上,存在拼写错误(突变)。该基因在眼睛和大脑中高度表达,它编码一种位于细胞内质网隔间内的蛋白质。由于尚不清楚的原因,WFS1突变优先影响RGCs,这是这种遗传性疾病中显著的视觉损失的原因。目前没有有效的治疗方法来阻止或减缓疾病进展,管理仍然是支持性的,包括提供视觉辅助和职业康复。WS的研究一直受到限制,因为它相对罕见,而且无法接触到受影响患者的眼睛和大脑组织。然而,最近,通过使用患者更容易获得的细胞,如皮肤细胞(成纤维细胞)或动物模型,如小鼠和斑马鱼,我们对这种疾病的理解取得了重大进展。这篇综述总结了WFS1突变影响细胞、损害细胞功能并最终导致细胞过早丧失的机制。还讨论了阻断这些途径的可能治疗策略,特别关注药物再利用(即使用已被批准用于其他疾病的药物)和基因治疗(即替换或修复有缺陷的WFS1基因)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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