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Current Pharmaceutical Design

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1381-6128
ISSN (Online): 1873-4286

Therapeutic Approaches to Polyglutamine Diseases: Combating Protein Misfolding and Aggregation

Author(s): Martin Herbst and Erich E. Wanker

Volume 12, Issue 20, 2006

Page: [2543 - 2555] Pages: 13

DOI: 10.2174/138161206777698828

Price: $65

Abstract

Polyglutamine diseases are autosomal dominant, late-onset neurodegenerative disorders. Expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) tract above a threshold size leads to misfolding and aggregation and eventual intracellular accumulation of the disease-specific protein. To date, only symptomatic treatments of limited effectiveness are available. Various research strategies aim to interfere with known steps in the pathomechanism. Protein misfolding and aggregation probably occur very early in the cascade of pathogenic events and are therefore attractive targets for potential drug treatment. Misfolding of polyQ proteins may either be prevented by drugs that stabilize the native conformation or via induction of cellular chaperones. Several amyloid-binding dyes as well as small molecules that inhibit polyQ protein aggregation have been identified in compound screens and may be entered into drug development. Small molecule inhibitors of further pathogenic phenomena like transcriptional repression, excitotoxicity, mitochondrial dysfunction, and neuronal cell death have been tested in vitro and in vivo. The first drugs have now reached clinical trial stage. More general studies of how putative steps in the pathomechanism can be modulated will yield further insights into the pathogenesis of polyQ disorders.

Keywords: cellular transcription factors, SCA1 transgenic mice, mutant polyQ proteins, cell-free aggrtegation assay, Hsp 70, geldanamycin


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