Guest guest Posted December 28, 2005 Report Share Posted December 28, 2005 Epigenetic therapy for lupus on the horizon  Dec 28, 2005  Janis Winston-Salem, NC and Charlottesville, VA - Much of the variability in severity, organ involvement, and response to therapy among patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is blamed on differences in gene expression. That, in turn, is due to epigenetic mechanisms such as changes in chromatin structure caused by acetylation, methylation, or phosphorylation of histone, one of the " master regulators " of gene expression. A research team led by Dr Nilamadhab Mishra (Wake Forrest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC) reports in the November- December 2005 issue of the Journal of Proteome Research that a mouse model of lupus has aberrant histone codes caused by posttranslational changes in acetylation and that these bad codes can be " reset " by treatment with a histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor [1]. The investigators think that this is why HDAC inhibitors reduced kidney disease, skin disease, and lymphoproliferation in previous studies with these mice [2,3,4]. Since one of those compounds was the widely used antiseizure drug valproic acid (divalproex sodium, [Depakote, Abbott Laboratories]), clinical trials in lupus patients could begin relatively soon, and Mishra told rheumawire that such a study is on the drawing board.      By resetting the defect, these drugs may produce better outcomes than other treatments.       " Do not give up hope! " Mishra advises rheumatologists. " Besides genetics, epigenetics plays a major role in complex diseases like lupus. Now there is great enthusiasm for developing drugs by targeting single pathways, but trichostatin A [TSA], suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid [sAHA], or valproic acid can target multiple defects at the same time. By resetting the defect, these drugs may produce better outcomes than other treatments. " Depakote, other HDAC inhibitors " reboot " the chromosome Mishra suspects that epigenetic changes explain why lupus is more common in females, why it affects age groups differently, and why clinical manifestations differ among lupus patients. One of the changes found in this study, histone 3 (H3) trimethylation, suppresses one copy in each pair of X chromosomes during development of female animals. This change was five times more common in the lupus mice than in normal mice, and the investigators think that it might shut down a part of the active X chromosome that would otherwise protect against lupus. Since epigenetic changes accumulate over time and in response to environmental factors, they might also explain why one genetically identical twin can develop lupus while the other does not. Treatment with the HDAC inhibitors essentially reboots the gene by stripping away the accumulated epigenetic changes.      These observations may eventually provide the foundation for the use of combination epigenetic therapy using methylase inhibitors plus HDAC inhibitors for the treatment of SLE.       The current study showed that lupus-prone mice have both overmethylation and undermethylation of various histone codes. Two specific methylation changes and one acetylation change differentiated lupus mice from normal controls. Treatment with TSA corrected the site-specific hypoacetylation states on H3 and H4 and improved the clinical status of the mice. " Thus, this study is the first to establish the association between aberrant histone codes and pathogenesis of autoimmune disease SLE. These aberrant posttranslational histone modifications can therefore be reset with histone deacetylation inhibition in vivo, " the investigators write. They continue, " These observations may eventually provide the foundation for the use of combination epigenetic therapy using methylase inhibitors plus HDAC inhibitors for the treatment of SLE. "    Sources  BA, Busby SA, Shabanowitz J, et al. Resetting the epigenetic histone code in the MRL-lpr/lpr mouse model of lupus by histone deacetylase inhibition. J Proteome Res 2005; 4:2032-2042.  Reilly CM, Mishra N, JM, et al. Modulation of renal disease in MRL/lpr mice by suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid. J Immunol 2004; 173:4171-4178.  Ziolkowska A, Nghiem A, Snowwhite I, et al. Valproic acid prevents skin disease and attenuates severity of kidney disease in MRL-lpr/lpr lupus-like mouse model. 2005 ACR/ARHP Annual Scientific Meeting; November 12-17, 2005; San Diego. Abstract 1686. Reilly CM, Mishra N, JM, et al. Modulation of renal disease in MRL/lpr mice by suberoylanilide hyodroxamic acid. J Immunol 2004; 173:4171-4178.   http://www.jointandbone.org/viewArticle.do?primaryKey=623273 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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