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Showing posts with label FRAX486. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FRAX486. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 November 2022

Repurposing Anti-parasite drugs to treat Cancer and Autism?

 

I should start this post by highlighting that generally cancer and autism are not caused by parasites.

I have to be a little careful because we now know that certain types of virus and bacteria are involved in the initial trigger to initiate some types of cancer. This is why many females are now offered human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines to minimize the chance of several different cancers. I noticed recently that in the US this vaccine is advertised on TV.  I used to know a woman who like most people had the HPV virus as a child, but did not have this vaccine.  She developed a rare oral cancer that the vaccine would have protected against and died very young. We saw in a previous post how a specific gut bacteria blocks the initiation of childhood leukemia.

The pharmaceutical industry does not seem to like the idea of repurposing existing drugs to treat a different disease.  There are some exceptions; it is OK to treat females with acne, using the diuretic drug Spironolactone.  Nobody seems to object to the treatment of intractable headaches with drugs actually approved to lower blood pressure (Verapamil, Amlodipine etc).

When investigating cancers you have to look at the specific underlying mechanisms, just as you do with autism.

As we saw long ago in this blog, it has been suggested to classify autism as either over-active pro-growth signaling pathways, or under-active pro-growth signaling pathways. Most is the over-active type.

Cancer is very clearly another example of over-active pro-growth signaling pathways, so it is not surprising that there is an overlap between therapies for autism and cancer.  The difference is that they are far more likely to be effective in autism. 

So, a cheap anti-parasite drug for kids like Mebendazole, which just happens to also be a Wnt inhibitor,  may slow down the growth of some cancers, but it is sadly not curative.  In an autistic brain where Wnt signalling might be overactive, a lower dose of Mebendazole, might well provide a long-term benefit.   

My old posts that mention Wnt signaling are here:-

https://www.epiphanyasd.com/search/label/Wnt 

Wnt signaling interestingly plays a role in how your hair will go gray/grey. If you reduce Wnt signaling, your hair will go gray and so this is an inevitable side effect of a potent Wnt inhibitor. 

Premature graying might indeed indicate reduced Wnt activity.

 

Pyrantel pamoate

Our reader Dragos recently fined tuned his adult son’s anti-aggression therapy and he recently shared his latest innovation:-

 

"you have to give him 20mg of propranolol 2-3 times a day, pyrantel pamoate 750mg in the evening for 2-3 days, and you will see that his anger will disappear, stay on propranolol. After 3 weeks repeat with antiparasitic, you will see that I was right, you don't use psychotropic drugs"

 

Propranolol is a normally used to lower blood pressure, but it does this in a way that also reduces anxiety.  At the low doses used by Dragos, it has been used to treat actors with stage fright. It can be used before exams or driving tests, to calm the person down.

Propranolol has been trialed in autism. Some people use a low dose and some use a higher dose.

Pyrantel pamoate is used to treat hookworms and other parasites that can be picked up by young children. It works by paralyzing the worms. This is achieved by blocking certain acetylcholine receptors in the worm.

As is very often the case, pyrantel pamoate likely has other modes of action that are entirely different. Is it a Wnt inhibitor like the other hookworm treatment Mebendazole?

I did a  quick search on google and it gave me the wrong pamoate. 

Pyrvinium pamoate is able to kill various cancer cells, especially CSC. The drug functions through the reduction of WNT- and Hedgehog-dependent signaling pathways (Dattilo et al., 2020). 

Pyrvinium pamoate is yet another anti-parasitic drug, but not the one Dragos is using.

So pyrantel pamoate may not be a Wnt inhibitor, unlike many anthelmintic drugs, but it is used by the “anti-parasitic re-purposer in chief” Dr Simon Wu.  He publishes his findings/thoughts, which is good to see.  He likes to combine different anti-parasitic drugs.

I did look up the effect of pyrantel pamoate on gene expression.  There is data, but you really need to see the source material to know whether anything is valid.

Inhibiting GSTP1 (glutathione S-transferase pi 1) is suggested and that is a feature in common with an anti-parasite drug class called Thiazolides (e.g.  Nitazoxanide).  That would make pyrantel pamoate a potential therapy for triple-negative breast cancer, where the cancer cells rely on vigorous activity by the enzyme glutathione-S-transferase Pi1 (GSTP1).  Cancer cells are highly vulnerable to oxidative stress, and as we know glutathione is the main way the body extinguishes it. Glutathione S-transferases P1 protects breast cancer cell from cell death.  So you want to inhibit GSTP1.

Pyrantel has many other suggested effects even reducing expression of the gene FXR2 (fragile X mental retardation,2) and increasing expression of the gene MTSS1 (metastasis suppressor 1).

Pyrantel is even suggested as an epilepsy drug.

 

Drug repositioning in epilepsy reveals novel antiseizure candidates

Epilepsy treatment falls short in ~30% of cases. A better understanding of epilepsy pathophysiology can guide rational drug development in this difficult to treat condition. We tested a low-cost, drug-repositioning strategy to identify candidate epilepsy drugs that are already FDA-approved and might be immediately tested in epilepsy patients who require new therapies.

Expanding on these analyses of epilepsy gene expression signatures, this study generated a list of 184 candidate anti-epilepsy compounds. This list of possible seizure suppressing compounds includes 129 drugs that have been previously studied in some model of seizures and 55 that have never been studied in the context of seizures. 91 of these 184 compounds are already FDA approved for human use, but not for treating seizures or epilepsy. We selected four of these drugs (doxycycline, metformin, nifedipine, and pyrantel tartrate) to test for seizure suppression in vivo.

Pyrantel tartrate is an antiparasitic agent that acts by inhibiting fumarate reductase, and by directly acting on acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction of infecting helminths. Pyrantel tartrate is FDA approved for use in domestic animals and has been used to treat human parasitic infections.73 Unlike nifedipine and metformin (for which some rodent studies and human reports relate to seizures), a March 2018 PubMed search for “pyrantel and epilepsy” and “pyrantel and seizure” found no manuscripts that studied pyrantel in seizures. Thus, pyrantel tartrate represents a truly novel antiseizure drug candidate yielded by our screen.

 

All in all it is not surprising that Dr Yu is prescribing pyrantel pamoate.

Digging any deeper is beyond the scope of a blog post.

What is clear is that pyrantel pamoate and mebendazole are unlikely to be equally effective in Dragos’ son.

Other anti-parasite drugs work very differently.

In the chart the mode of action of some common drugs  is presented.

 

Anthelminticsfor drug repurposing: Opportunities and challenges

 

Mode of action of albendazole (ABZ), ivermectin (IVM), levamisole (LV), mebendazole (MBZ), niclosamide (NIC), flubendazole (FLU), rafoxanide (RAF), nitazoxanide (NTZ), pyrvinium pamoate (PP), and eprinomectin (EP).

  

Suramin is now quite well known as a potential autism therapy and two different groups are trying to commercialize it.  Suramin is the original anti-purinergic drug (APD), it blocks purinergic receptors that have names like P2Y2.

When I looked at PAK1 a long time ago, which was put forward as a treatment pathway for neurofibromatosis, some schizophrenia and some autism I came across Ivermectin as an existing alternative to the research drug FRAX486, or the expensive BIO 30 propolis from New Zealand.

A decade later and the world goes crazy when the idea of using Ivermectin to treat COVID 19 gets well publicized.  The good news is that now we know that regular use of Ivermectin is not as dangerous as people thought it would be.  Many people have been using the veterinary version in the US, Brazil and elsewhere. 

The supporting research:- 

Effect of Pyrantel on gene expression.

 https://maayanlab.cloud/Harmonizome/gene_set/pyrantel-5513/CMAP+Signatures+of+Differentially+Expressed+Genes+for+Small+Molecules

 

decreases expression of:-

FXR2   fragile X mental retardation, autosomal homolog 2

(and many more)

 

Increases expression of

MTSS1 metastasis suppressor 1

BNIP1 BCL2/adenovirus E1B 19kDa interacting protein 1

BRAF B-Raf proto-oncogene, serine/threonine kinase

(and many more)

 

https://maayanlab.cloud/Harmonizome/gene_set/Pyrantel+Pamoate/CTD+Gene-Chemical+Interactions

Glutathione S-transferase P is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the GSTP1 gene.

Pyrantel Pamoate Gene Set

Dataset          CTD Gene-Chemical Interactions

2 genes/proteins interacting with the chemical Pyrantel Pamoate from the curated CTD Gene-Chemical Interactions dataset.

GPR35    G protein-coupled receptor 35

GSTP1   glutathione S-transferase pi 1

 

Triple-negative breast cancer target is found

They discovered that cells from triple-negative breast cancer cells rely on vigorous activity by an enzyme called glutathione-S-transferase Pi1 (GSTP1). They showed that in cancer cells, GSTP1 regulates a type of metabolism called glycolysis, and that inhibition of GSTP1 impairs glycolytic metabolism in triple-negative cancer cells, starving them of energy, nutrients and signaling capability. Normal cells do not rely as much on this particular metabolic pathway to obtain usable chemical energy, but cells within many tumors heavily favor glycolysis.

  

"Inhibiting GSTP1 impairs glycolytic metabolism," Nomura said. "More broadly, this inhibition starves triple-negative breast cancer cells, preventing them from making the macromolecules they need, including the lipids they need to make membranes and the nucleic acids they need to make DNA. It also prevents these cells from making enough ATP, the molecule that is the basic energy fuel for cells." 

 

Anthelmintics for drug repurposing: Opportunities and challenges 

It has been demonstrated that some of the anthelmintics are able to inhibit critical oncogenic pathways, such as Wnt/β-catenin, signal transducer and activator of transcription proteins 3 (STAT3), and nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB; therefore, their application for cancer treatment has been considered.

 

Repositioning of Anthelmintic Drugs for the Treatment of Cancers of the Digestive System

 

Anthelmintics for drug repurposing: Opportunities and challenges

 

Mode of action of albendazole (ABZ), ivermectin (IVM), levamisole (LV), mebendazole (MBZ), niclosamide (NIC), flubendazole (FLU), rafoxanide (RAF), nitazoxanide (NTZ), pyrvinium pamoate (PP), and eprinomectin (EP).

 

Thiazolides inhibit growth and induce glutathione-S-transferase Pi (GSTP1)-dependent cell death in human colon cancer cells


More research on the repurposing anti-parasite drugs: 


Antiparasitic and Antifungal Medications for Targeting Cancer Cells Literature Review and Case Studies Frederick T. Guilford, MD; Simon Yu, MD

Chronic inflammation is a new catch phrase for the explanation of all chronic degenerative diseases, from asthma, arthritis, heart disease, auto-immune disease, and irritable bowel disease to cancer. Occult infections from oncovirus, bacterial, and fungal infections as well as from lesser known parasitic infections are driving forces in the cellular evolution and degeneration of cancer cells. An approach using currently available medications that target both fungal and parasitic metabolism appears to interfere with the metabolic synergy that is associated with tumor growth and aggressiveness 

 

The Antitumor Potentials of Benzimidazole Anthelmintics as Repurposing Drugs 

 

Repurposing Drugs in Oncology (ReDO)—mebendazole as an anti-cancer agent 

 

A Pinworm Medication Is Being Tested As A Potential Anti-Cancer Drug


 Conclusion

I did suggest long ago that Mebendazole, as a Wnt inhibitor, might be a cheap and effective treatment for some autism.  I had envisaged that it would need to be given daily, as it is in the cancer trials.

Dragos’ use of pyrantel pamoate, for an average of 4 days a month is interesting.  It is cheap, safe and practical.

One key issue with antiparasitic drugs is how much is absorbed into the blood stream.  If 100% of the drug stays in the gut, its benefit will be limited.

About 20% of Mebendazole ends up in the blood stream and if you take it often this figure is reported to increase.

The combo of propranolol + pyrantel pamoate is an interesting option to treat self-injury and aggressive behavior.  It works for Dragos and undoubtedly will for some others.

Is the inhibition of Wnt signalling the reason why pyrantel pamoate is effective for Dragos’ son?  There is no evidence to support that.

Are antiparasitic drugs going to be widely adopted to treat any unrelated conditions, cancer included, I very much doubt it.

Cancer is better avoided, than treated.  It is a much more achievable objective.

The Fragile X researcher Randi Hagerman takes metformin, as her chemoprevention therapy. She is the medical director of MIND Institute at the University of California, Davis.

You can raise IQ in people with Fragile X by 10-15% using Metformin.  I guess Randi had been reading up on Metformin and came across the anti-cancer effects.

If I had to suggest an anti-parasite drug for Randi to try in Fragile X, I would suggest the PAK inhibitor Ivermectin, made (in)famous by Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro during Covid. The research drug FRAX 486 is called FRAX for Fragile X. It is a PAK inhibitor that never made it to market.  Ivermectin is an existing drug that is also a PAK inhibitor.  Worth a try, Randi?

I expect Dr Yu might try and increases his chances and make a combo with a second anti-parasitic drug.

Metformin is one of several anti-cancer choices, it depends which type of cancer is of concern. For RAS-dependent cancer I think Atorvastatin is the best choice. 

If you read the research, like me and Randi, chemoprevention is the obvious choice for older adults. Dementia prevention is equally obvious.

Parkinson’s prevention may be achieved by blocking Cav1.3 (amlodipine etc)

Alzheimer’s prevention may be achieved using low dose fenamates (Ponstan etc).

For vascular dementia and Alzheimer’s prevention/treatment spermidine (in the form of modified wheatgerm) is promising.

Anti-parasite drugs for cancer and autism? Yes, it sounds mad. But is it?

What is for sure is that your pediatrician will think you have gone mad!

Our reader MG in Hong Kong will have got some new ideas to think about.






Friday, 19 August 2016

PAK inhibitors and potentially treating some Autism using Grandpa’s Medicine Cabinet





I wrote several posts about why PAK1 inhibitors should be beneficial in some autism and indeed some schizophrenia.

We also saw that PAK1-blocking drugs could be potentially useful for the treatment of neurofibromatosis type 2, in addition to RAS-induced cancers and neurofibromatosis type 1.

One problem with drugs developed for cancer is that, even if they finally get approved, they tend to be ultra-expensive.  Production volumes are low because even if they “work” they do not prolong life for so long and cancer has numerous sub-types.

Cheap drugs are ones used to treat common chronic conditions like high blood pressure, high cholesterol and indeed treatment of male lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), like benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).

A small number of readers of this blog have confirmed the beneficial effect of PAK inhibitors in their specific sub-types of autism.  The problem is that there are no potent PAK1 inhibitors suitable for long term use that are readily available.

The anti-parasite drug Ivermectin is an extremely cheap PAK1 inhibitor, but cannot be used long term, due to its other effects.

Propolis containing CAPE (Caffeic Acid Phenethyl Ester) is a natural PAK1 inhibitor, but may not be sufficiently potent as is reported by people with neurofibromatosis.

You would think somebody would just synthesize CAPE (Caffeic Acid Phenethyl Ester) artificially and then higher doses could be achieved.


PAK Inhibitors and Treatment of Prostate Enlargement

I was rather surprised that research has recently been published suggesting that PAK inhibitors could be used to treat the prostate enlargement, common in most older men. 



Abstract

Prostate smooth muscle tone and hyperplastic growth are involved in the pathophysiology and treatment of male lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS). Available drugs are characterized by limited efficacy. Patients’ adherence is particularly low to combination therapies of 5α-reductase inhibitors and α1-adrenoceptor antagonists, which are supposed to target contraction and growth simultaneously. Consequently, molecular etiology of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and new compounds interfering with smooth muscle contraction or growth in the prostate are of high interest. Here, we studied effects of p21-activated kinase (PAK) inhibitors (FRAX486, IPA3) in hyperplastic human prostate tissues, and in stromal cells (WPMY-1). In hyperplastic prostate tissues, PAK1, -2, -4, and -6 may be constitutively expressed in catecholaminergic neurons, while PAK1 was detected in smooth muscle and WPMY-1 cells. Neurogenic contractions of prostate strips by electric field stimulation were significantly inhibited by high concentrations of FRAX486 (30 μM) or IPA3 (300 μM), while noradrenaline- and phenylephrine-induced contractions were not affected. FRAX486 (30 μM) inhibited endothelin-1- and -2-induced contractions. In WPMY-1 cells, FRAX486 or IPA3 (24 h) induced concentration-dependent (1–10 μM) degeneration of actin filaments. This was paralleled by attenuation of proliferation rate, being observed from 1 to 10 μM FRAX486 or IPA3. Cytotoxicity of FRAX486 and IPA3 in WPMY-1 cells was time- and concentration-dependent. Stimulation of WPMY-1 cells with endothelin-1 or dihydrotestosterone, but not noradrenaline induced PAK phosphorylation, indicating PAK activation by endothelin-1. Thus, PAK inhibitors may inhibit neurogenic and endothelin-induced smooth muscle contractions in the hyperplastic human prostate, and growth of stromal cells. Targeting prostate smooth muscle contraction and stromal growth at once by a single compound is principally possible, at least under experimental conditions.


It looks like a PAK inhibitor could potentially solve both the key problems in BPH and so replace the current therapies.



Existing Drugs for LUTS/BPH

Undoubtedly someone is going to wonder whether existing drugs for LUTS/BPH might improve autism.  This is actually possible, but totally unrelated to PAK1 inhibition and RASopathies.

Existing drugs are in two classes, 5α-reductase inhibitors and α1-adrenoceptor antagonists.


α-adrenoceptor antagonists

Alpha blockers relax certain muscles and help small blood vessels remain open. They work by keeping the hormone norepinephrine (noradrenaline) from tightening the muscles in the walls of smaller arteries and veins, which causes the vessels to remain open and relaxed. This improves blood flow and lowers blood pressure.
Because alpha blockers also relax other muscles throughout the body, these medications can help improve urine flow in older men with prostate problems.

Selective α1-adrenergic receptor antagonists are often used in BPH because it is the α1-adrenergic receptor that is present in the prostate.

 Î± 2-adrenergic receptors are present elsewhere in the body

Alpha-2 blockers are used to treat anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). They decrease sympathetic outflow from the central nervous system. Post-traumatic stress disorder is an anxiety disorder that is theorized to be related to a hyperactive sympathetic nervous system.

Alpha-2 receptor agonists for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder



So a nonselective alpha blocker, like one given to an older man with high blood pressure and BPH, might well have an effect on some kinds of anxiety.

You would think that a selective alpha 2 blocker might be interesting, how about Idazoxan?

Idazoxan is a drug which is used in research. It acts as both a selective Î±2 adrenergic receptor antagonist, and an antagonist for the imidazoline receptor. Idazoxan has been under investigation as an antidepressant, but it did not reach the market as such. More recently, it is under investigation as an adjunctive treatment in schizophrenia. Due to its alpha-2 receptor antagonism it is capable of enhancing therapeutic effects of antipsychotics, possibly by enhancing dopamine neurotransmission in the prefrontal cortex of the brain, a brain area thought to be involved in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia.


Mirtazapine is a cheap generic drug used at high doses for depression.  It happens to be a selective alpha 2 blocker, but it has numerous other effects as well.  One reader of this blog does respond very well to Mirtazapine.


So realistically in Grandpa’s medicine cabinet there might a selective alpha 1 agonist or a non-selective alpha agonist, it is the latter type that might have an effect on some kinds of autism.


5α-reductase inhibitors

The pharmacology of 5α-reductase inhibition involves the binding of NADPH to the enzyme followed by the substrate. Specific substrates include testosterone, progesterone, androstenedione, epitestosterone, cortisol, aldosterone, and deoxycorticosterone.

Beyond being a catalyst in testosterone reduction, 5α-reductase isoforms I and II reduce progesterone to 5α-dihydroprogesterone (5α-DHP) and deoxycorticosterone to dihydrodeoxycorticosterone (DHDOC).

In vitro and animal models suggest subsequent 3α-reduction of DHT, 5α-DHP and DHDOC lead to neurosteroid metabolites with effect on cerebral function.

These neurosteroids, which include allopregnanolone, tetrahydrodeoxycorticosterone (THDOC), and 5α-androstanediol, act as potent positive allosteric modulators of GABAA receptors, and have anticonvulsant, antidepressant, anxiolytic, prosexual, and anticonvulsant effects.

Inhibition of 5α-reductase results in decreased conversion of testosterone to DHT.

This, in turn, results in slight elevations in testosterone and estradiol levels. 

In BPH, DHT acts as a potent cellular androgen and promotes prostate growth; therefore, it inhibits and alleviates symptoms of BPH. In alopecia, male and female-pattern baldness is an effect of androgenic receptor activation, so reducing levels of DHT also reduces hair loss.

A new look at the 5alpha-reductase inhibitor finasteride


Finasteride is the first 5alpha-reductase inhibitor that received clinical approval for the treatment of human benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and androgenetic alopecia (male pattern hair loss). These clinical applications are based on the ability of finasteride to inhibit the Type II isoform of the 5alpha-reductase enzyme, which is the predominant form in human prostate and hair follicles, and the concomitant reduction of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone (DHT). In addition to catalyzing the rate-limiting step in the reduction of testosterone, both isoforms of the 5alpha-reductase enzyme are responsible for the reduction of progesterone and deoxycorticosterone to dihydroprogesterone (DHP) and dihydrodeoxycorticosterone (DHDOC), respectively. Recent preclinical data indicate that the subsequent 3alpha-reduction of DHT, DHP and DHDOC produces steroid metabolites with rapid non-genomic effects on brain function and behavior, primarily via an enhancement of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic inhibitory neurotransmission. Consistent with their ability to enhance the action of GABA at GABA(A) receptors, these steroid derivatives (termed neuroactive steroids) possess anticonvulsant, antidepressant and anxiolytic effects in addition to altering aspects of sexual- and alcohol-related behaviors. Thus, finasteride, which inhibits both isoforms of 5alpha-reductase in rodents, has been used as a tool to manipulate neuroactive steroid levels and determine the impact on behavior. Results of some preclinical studies and clinical observations with finasteride are described in this review article. The data suggest that endogenous neuroactive steroid levels may be inversely related to symptoms of premenstrual and postpartum dysphoric disorder, catamenial epilepsy, depression, and alcohol withdrawal.


This would suggest that a 5α-reductase inhibitor, like finasteride, that might be among Grandpa’s tablets might very well have an effect on someone with GABAa dysfunction, this includes very many people with autism, schizophrenia and Down Syndrome.

Whether the effect will be good or bad is hard to say, and may well depend on whether other drugs that target GABA or NMDA receptors are being used. Due to their other effects, 5α-reductase inhibitors are usually only used in adults.

Merck developed a lower dose form of finasteride, called Prospecia to treat baldness, usually in men.  It is 20% the normal potency used for BPH.


Side effects

The current BPH drugs cause side effects in some people.  PAK1 inhibitors may also have some side effects.


Conclusion

Going back in the days of living with your extended family might make treating many people’s autism much simpler.  It looks like many older people’s drugs can be repurposed for some types of autism (ion channel modifying diuretics, calcium channel blockers, statins, even potentially intranasal insulin in some).  Because older people’s drugs are so widely used they are well understood and inexpensive.  

Clearly the research on PAK inhibitors for LUTS/BPH is at an early stage, but there is a huge potential market.   A widely available PAK1 inhibitor might be a big help to some people with autism, neurofibromatosis, other RASopathies, not just Grandpa’s prostate.

In addition to FRAX486 and IPA3, why doesn’t someone try synthetic CAPE, i.e. without the bees, as a PAK inhibitor?

Bioactivity and chemical synthesis of caffeic acid phenethyl ester and its derivatives.



There is far more chance of a PAK1 inhibitor coming to market for LUTS/BPH, or certain cancers than for autism.  That is a fact of life.

As for 5α-reductase inhibitors, like finasteride, we know from Hardan’s study on Pregnenolone at Stanford that this hormone can have a positive effect and we know that various natural steroid metabolites will modulate GABA subunits.  So it is quite likely that finasteride is going have a behavioral effect.  Perhaps Hardan would like to trial finasteride 5mg and 1mg (Prospecia) in some adults with autism. I suspect it will make some people “worse” and others somewhat “better”; so please do not report the “average” response, highlight the nature of the positive responders.






Monday, 30 May 2016

Sense, Missense or Nonsense - Interpreting Genetic Research in Autism (TCF4, TSC2 , Shank3 and Wnt)




Some clever autism researchers pin their hopes on genetics, while some equally clever ones are not convinced.

One big problem is that genetic testing is still not very rigorous, it is fine if you know what you are looking for, like a specific single gene defect, but if it is a case of find any possible defect in any of the 700+ autism genes it can be hopeless.

Most of the single gene types of autism can be diagnosed based on known physical differences and then that specific gene can be analyzed to confirm the diagnosis.

Today’s post includes some recent examples from the research, and they highlight what is often lacking - some common sense.

There are numerous known single gene conditions that lead to a cascade of dysfunctions that can result in behaviors people associate with autism.  However in most of these single gene conditions, like Fragile X or Pitt-Hopkins, there is a wide spectrum, from mildly affected to severely affected.

There are various different ways in which a gene can be disturbed and so within a single gene condition there can be a variety of sub-dysfunctions.  A perfect example was recently forwarded to me, a study showing how a partial deletion of the Pitt Hopkins gene (TCF4) produced no physical features of the syndrome, but did unfortunately produce intellectual disability.

The study goes on to suggest that “screening for mutations in TCF4 could be considered in the investigation of NSID (non-syndromic intellectual disability)”

Partial deletion of TCF4 in three generation family with non-syndromic intellectual disability, without features of Pitt-Hopkins syndrome



This all matters because one day when therapies for Pitt Hopkins are available, they would very likely be effective on the cognitive impairment of those with undiagnosed partial-Pitt Hopkins.



Another reader sent me links to the studies showing:-


Rapamycin reverses impaired social interaction in mouse models of tuberous sclerosis complex.

Reversal of learning deficits in a Tsc2+/- mouse model of tuberous sclerosis.


But isn’t that Tuberous sclerosis (TSC) extremely rare? like Pitt Hopkins.  Is it really relevant?

Tuberous sclerosis (TSC)  is indeed a rare multisystem genetic disease that causes benign tumors to grow in the brain and on other vital organs such as the kidneys, heart, eyes, lungs, and skin. A combination of symptoms may include seizures, intellectual disability, developmental delay, behavioral problems, skin abnormalities, and lung and kidney disease. TSC is caused by a mutation of either of two genes, TSC1 and TSC2, 

About 60% of people with TSC have autism (biased to TSC2 mutations) and many have epilepsy.

How rare is TSC?  According to research between seven and 12 cases per 100,000, with more than half of these cases undetected.  

Call it 0.01%, rare indeed.

How rare is partial TSC?  What is partial TSC?  That is just my name for what happens when you have just a minor missense mutation, you have a mutation in TSC2 but have none of the characteristic traits of tuberous sclerosis, except autism.
In a recent study of children with autism 20% has a missense mutation of TSC2. 

Not so rare after all.


Mutations in tuberous sclerosis gene may be rife in autism


Mutations in TSC2, a gene typically associated with a syndrome called tuberous sclerosis, are found in many children with autism, suggests a genetic analysis presented yesterday at the 2016 International Meeting for Autism Research in Baltimore.
The findings support the theory that autism results from multiple ‘hits’ to the genome.
Tuberous sclerosis is characterized by benign tumors and skin growths called macules. Autism symptoms show up in about half of all people with tuberous sclerosis, perhaps due to abnormal wiring of neurons in the brain. Tuberous sclerosis is thought to result from mutations in either of two genes: TSC1 or TSC2.
The new analysis finds that mutations in TSC2 can also be silent, as far as symptoms of the syndrome go: Researchers found the missense mutations in 18 of 87 people with autism, none of whom have any of the characteristic traits of tuberous sclerosis.
“They had no macules, no seizure history,” says senior researcher Louisa Kalsner, assistant professor of pediatrics and neurology at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine in Farmington, who presented the results. “We were surprised.”
The researchers stumbled across the finding while searching for genetic variants that could account for signs of autism in children with no known cause of the condition. They performed genetic testing on blood samples from 87 children with autism.

Combined risk:

To see whether silent TSC2 mutations are equally prevalent in the general population, the researchers scanned data from 53,599 people in the Exome Aggregation Consortium database. They found the mutation in 10 percent of the individuals.
The researchers looked more closely at the children with autism, comparing the 18 children who have the mutation with the 69 who do not.
Children with TSC2 mutations were diagnosed about 10 months earlier than those without a mutation, suggesting the TSC2 mutations increase the severity of autism features. But in her small sample, Kalsner says, the groups show no differences in autism severity or cognitive skills. The researchers also found that 6 of the 18 children with TSC2 mutations are girls, compared with 12 of 69 children who don’t have the mutation.
TSC2 variants may combine with other genetic variants to increase the risk of autism. “We don’t think TSC is the sole cause of autism in these kids, but there’s a significant chance that it increases their risk,” Kalsner says.


"hyperactivation of the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) is a consequence of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) 1/2 inactivation."

"the combination of rapamycin and resveratrol may be an effective clinical strategy for treatment of diseases with mTORC1 hyperactivation."


So for the 20% of autism with partial TSC, so-called Rapalogs and other mTOR inhibitors could be helpful, but Rapalogs all have side effects.

One interesting option that arose in my earlier post on Type 3 diabetes and intranasal insulin is Metformin. The common drug used for type 2 diabetes.

 








Metformin regulates mTORC1 signaling (but so does insulin).

'Metformin activates AMPK by inhibiting oxidative phosphorylation, which in turn negatively regulates mTORC1 signaling via activation of TSC2 and inhibitory phosphorylation of raptor. In parallel, metformin inhibits mTORC1 signaling by suppressing the activity of the Rag GTPases and upregulating REDD1."

Source:  Rapalogs and mTOR inhibitors as anti-aging therapeutics



Clearly you could also just use intranasal insulin.  It might be less potent but should have less side effects because it acting only within the CNS (Metfornin would be given orally).



The Shank protein and the Wnt protein family

Mutations in a gene called Shank3 occur in about 0.5 percent of people with autism.  
But what about partial Shank3 dysfunction?

Shank proteins also play a role in synapse formation and dendritic spine maturation.

Mutations in this gene are associated with autism spectrum disorder. This gene is often missing in patients with 22q13.3 deletion syndrome

Researchers at MIT have just shown, for the first time, that loss of Shank3 affects a well-known set of proteins that comprise the Wnt signaling pathway.  Without Shank3, Wnt signaling is impaired and the synapses do not fully mature.


“The finding raises the possibility of treating autism with drugs that promote Wnt signaling, if the same connection is found in humans”

I have news for MIT, people already do use drugs that promote Wnt signaling, FRAX486 and Ivermectin for example.  All without any genetic testing, most likely.


Reactivating Shank3, or just promote Wnt signaling

The study below showed that in mice, aspects of autism were reversible by reactivating the Shank3 gene.  You might expect that in humans with a partial Shank3 dysfunction you might jump forward to the Wnt signaling pathway and intervene there.

Mouse study offers promise of reversing autism symptoms


One reader of this blog finds FRAX486 very helpful and to be without harmful side effects.  FRAX 486 was recently acquired by Roche and is sitting over there on a shelf gathering dust.



Where from here?

I think we should continue to look at the single gene syndromes but realize that very many more people may be partially affected by them.

Today’s genetic testing gives many false negatives, unless people know what they are looking for; so many dysfunctions go unnoticed.

This area of science is far from mature and there may be many things undetected in the 97% of the genome that is usually ignored that affect expression of the 3% that is the exome.

So best not to expect all the answers, just yet, from genetic testing; maybe in another 50 years.

Understanding and treating multiple-hit-autism, which is the majority of all autism, will require more detailed consideration of which signaling pathways have been disturbed by these hits.  There are 700 autism genes but there a far fewer signaling pathways, so it is not a gargantuan task.  For now a few people are figuring this out at home.   Good for them.

I hope someone does trials of metformin and intranasal insulin in autism.  Intranasal insulin looks very interesting and I was surprised to see in those earlier posts is apparently without side effects.

The odd thing is that metformin is indeed being trialed in autism, but not for its effect on autism, but its possible effect in countering the obesity caused by the usual psychiatric drugs widely prescribed in the US to people with autism.

My suggestion would be to ban the use of drugs like Risperdal, Abilify, Seroquel, Zyprexa etc.

Vanderbilt enrolling children with autism in medication-related weight gain study



Here are details of the trial.


Metformin will be dispensed in a liquid suspension of 100 mg/mL. For children 6-9 years of age, metformin will be started at 250 mg at their evening meal for 1 week, followed by the addition of a 250 mg dose at breakfast for 1 week. At the Week 2 visit, if metformin is well-tolerated, the dose will be increased to 500 mg twice daily. For children from 10-17 years of age, metformin will be started at 250 mg at their evening meal for 1 week, followed by the addition of a 250 mg dose at breakfast for 1 week. At the Week 2 visit, if metformin is well-tolerated, the dose will be increased to 500 mg twice daily. At the Week 4 visit, if metformin is well-tolerated, the dose will be increased to 850 mg twice daily.