线粒体视神经病变治疗的新途径。

Therapeutic advances in rare disease Pub Date : 2021-07-19 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26330040211029037
Wing Sum Vincent Ng, Matthieu Trigano, Thomas Freeman, Carmine Varrichio, Dinesh Kumar Kandaswamy, Ben Newland, Andrea Brancale, Malgorzata Rozanowska, Marcela Votruba
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引用次数: 3

摘要

线粒体视神经病变是一组视神经萎缩,以该组中最常见的两种情况为例,即常染色体显性视神经萎缩(ADOA)和Leber遗传性视神经病变(LHON)。他们的临床特征包括视力下降、色觉缺陷、盲肠中心暗点和视盘苍白伴视网膜神经纤维层变薄。主要病因是遗传,有潜在的细胞核或线粒体基因突变。主要病理是由于视网膜神经节细胞功能障碍和变性。目前只有一种经批准的治疗方法,而且没有可用的治疗方法。在这篇综述中,我们总结了ADOA和LHON的遗传和临床特征,然后研究了治疗干预的新途径。治疗LHON和ADOA的策略可分为四类:预防、补偿、替代和修复。从技术上讲,通过改变吸烟等风险因素或利用植入前基因诊断进行预防是一种选择,尽管由于这些疾病的非生命威胁性和可变性,这不太可能应用于线粒体视神经病变。补偿包括在细胞和组织水平上改善线粒体功能障碍的药物干预。更换和维修是令人兴奋的新兴领域。由于迫切需要新的疗法,该领域已发表和正在进行的临床试验可能会揭示未来的潜在益处。简明语言总结:导致视力丧失的视神经损伤可能是由各种侮辱引起的。导致视神经损伤的一组情况是由基因缺陷引起的,这些基因对细胞在称为线粒体的小细胞器中制造能量至关重要。这些情况被称为线粒体视神经病变,两个主要的例子被称为常染色体显性视神经萎缩和Leber遗传性视神经病变。这两种情况都是由细胞能量来源线粒体的问题引起的。最容易受到这种线粒体功能障碍影响的细胞被称为视网膜神经节细胞,也被统称为视神经,它们将电脉冲从眼睛的视网膜传递到大脑。这种故障会导致一些视神经细胞死亡,视力丧失的程度与受到这种影响的细胞数量有关。患者将失去视力和色觉,并在视野中形成中心盲点。目前没有治愈方法,治疗选择也很少。受这些毁灭性疾病影响的患者迫切需要新的治疗方法。新的治疗方法可能以四种方式出现:预防、补偿、更换和修复缺陷。在这里,我们探讨了目前和未来可能的治疗方法如何为那些患有这些疾病的人带来希望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

New avenues for therapy in mitochondrial optic neuropathies.

New avenues for therapy in mitochondrial optic neuropathies.

Mitochondrial optic neuropathies are a group of optic nerve atrophies exemplified by the two commonest conditions in this group, autosomal dominant optic atrophy (ADOA) and Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). Their clinical features comprise reduced visual acuity, colour vision deficits, centro-caecal scotomas and optic disc pallor with thinning of the retinal nerve fibre layer. The primary aetiology is genetic, with underlying nuclear or mitochondrial gene mutations. The primary pathology is owing to retinal ganglion cell dysfunction and degeneration. There is currently only one approved treatment and no curative therapy is available. In this review we summarise the genetic and clinical features of ADOA and LHON and then examine what new avenues there may be for therapeutic intervention. The therapeutic strategies to manage LHON and ADOA can be split into four categories: prevention, compensation, replacement and repair. Prevention is technically an option by modifying risk factors such as smoking cessation, or by utilising pre-implantation genetic diagnosis, although this is unlikely to be applied in mitochondrial optic neuropathies due to the non-life threatening and variable nature of these conditions. Compensation involves pharmacological interventions that ameliorate the mitochondrial dysfunction at a cellular and tissue level. Replacement and repair are exciting new emerging areas. Clinical trials, both published and underway, in this area are likely to reveal future potential benefits, since new therapies are desperately needed.

Plain language summary: Optic nerve damage leading to loss of vision can be caused by a variety of insults. One group of conditions leading to optic nerve damage is caused by defects in genes that are essential for cells to make energy in small organelles called mitochondria. These conditions are known as mitochondrial optic neuropathies and two predominant examples are called autosomal dominant optic atrophy and Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy. Both conditions are caused by problems with the energy powerhouse of cells: mitochondria. The cells that are most vulnerable to this mitochondrial malfunction are called retinal ganglion cells, otherwise collectively known as the optic nerve, and they take the electrical impulse from the retina in the eye to the brain. The malfunction leads to death of some of the optic nerve cells, the degree of vision loss being linked to the number of those cells which are impacted in this way. Patients will lose visual acuity and colour vision and develop a central blind spot in their field of vision. There is currently no cure and very few treatment options. New treatments are desperately needed for patients affected by these devastating diseases. New treatments can potentially arise in four ways: prevention, compensation, replacement and repair of the defects. Here we explore how present and possible future treatments might provide hope for those suffering from these conditions.

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