Nov. 30,2015
Derivatives of aspirin may yield new treatments for neurodegenerative diseases. Credit: Patricia Waldron |
A new study finds that a component of aspirin
binds to an enzyme called GAPDH, which is believed to play a major role in
neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's
diseases.
Researchers at the Boyce Thompson Institute and
John Hopkins University discovered that salicylic acid, the primary breakdown
product of aspirin, binds to GAPDH, thereby stopping it from moving into a
cell's nucleus, where it can trigger the cell's death. The study, which appears
in the journal PLOS ONE, also suggests that derivatives of salicylic
acid may hold promise for treating multiple neurodegenerative
diseases.
Senior author Daniel Klessig, a professor at
Boyce Thompson Institute and Cornell University, has studied the actions of
salicylic acid for many years, but primarily in plants. Salicylic acid is the
critical hormone for regulating the plant immune system. Previous studies have
identified several targets in plants that are affected by salicylic acid, and
many of these targets have equivalents in humans.
The anti-Parkinson's drug deprenyl blocks
GAPDH's entry into the nucleus and the resulting cell death. The researchers
discovered that salicylic acid also is effective at stopping GAPDH from moving
into the nucleus, thus preventing the cell from dying.
"The enzyme GAPDH, long thought to
function solely in glucose
metabolism, is now known to participate in intracellular
signaling," said co-author Solomon Snyder, professor of neuroscience at
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. "The new study establishes that
GAPDH is a target for salicylate drugs related to aspirin, and hence may be
relevant to the therapeutic actions of such drugs."
Furthermore, they found that a natural
derivative of salicylic acid from the Chinese medical herb licorice and a
lab-synthesized derivative bind to GAPDH more tightly than salicylic acid. Both
are more effective than salicylic acid at blocking GAPDH's movement into the
nucleus and the resulting cell death.
Earlier this year, Klessig's group identified
another novel target of salicylic acid called HMGB1 (High Mobility Group Box
1), which causes inflammation and is associated with several diseases,
including arthritis, lupus, sepsis, atherosclerosis and certain cancers. Low
levels of salicylic acid block these pro-inflammatory activities, and the above
mentioned salicylic acid derivatives are 40 to 70 times more potent than
salicylic acid at inhibiting these pro-inflammatory activities.
"A better understanding of how salicylic
acid and its derivatives regulate the activities of GAPDH and HMGB1, coupled
with the discovery of much more potent synthetic and natural derivatives of
salicylic acid, provide great promise for the development of new and better salicylic acid-based
treatments of a wide variety of prevalent, devastating diseases," said
Klessig.
http://health.einnews.com/article/299437911/TLAREip9GhHfBs-D
No comments:
Post a Comment