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Publication : Heat shock protein-based therapy as a potential candidate for treating the sphingolipidoses.

First Author  Kirkegaard T Year  2016
Journal  Sci Transl Med Volume  8
Issue  355 Pages  355ra118
PubMed ID  27605553 Mgi Jnum  J:259551
Mgi Id  MGI:5922264 Doi  10.1126/scitranslmed.aad9823
Citation  Kirkegaard T, et al. (2016) Heat shock protein-based therapy as a potential candidate for treating the sphingolipidoses. Sci Transl Med 8(355):355ra118
abstractText  Lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs) often manifest with severe systemic and central nervous system (CNS) symptoms. The existing treatment options are limited and have no or only modest efficacy against neurological manifestations of disease. We demonstrate that recombinant human heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) improves the binding of several sphingolipid-degrading enzymes to their essential cofactor bis(monoacyl)glycerophosphate in vitro. HSP70 treatment reversed lysosomal pathology in primary fibroblasts from 14 patients with eight different LSDs. HSP70 penetrated effectively into murine tissues including the CNS and inhibited glycosphingolipid accumulation in murine models of Fabry disease (Gla(-/-)), Sandhoff disease (Hexb(-/-)), and Niemann-Pick disease type C (Npc1(-/-)) and attenuated a wide spectrum of disease-associated neurological symptoms in Hexb(-/-) and Npc1(-/-) mice. Oral administration of arimoclomol, a small-molecule coinducer of HSPs that is currently in clinical trials for Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC), recapitulated the effects of recombinant human HSP70, suggesting that heat shock protein-based therapies merit clinical evaluation for treating LSDs.
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