Abstract
Proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the most common inherited motor neuropathy and the leading hereditary cause of infant mortality. Currently there is no effective treatment for the disease, reflecting a need for pharmacologic interventions that restore performance of dysfunctional motor neurons or suppress the consequences of their dysfunction. In a series of assays relevant to motor neuron biology, we explored the activities of a collection of tetrahydroindoles that were reported to alter the metabolism of amyloid precursor protein (APP). In Drosophila larvae the compounds suppressed aberrant larval locomotion due to mutations in the Khc and Klc genes, which respectively encode the heavy and light chains of kinesin-1. A representative compound of this class also suppressed the appearance of axonal swellings (alternatively termed axonal spheroids or neuritic beads) in the segmental nerves of the kinesin-deficient Drosophila larvae. Given the importance of kinesin-dependent transport for extension and maintenance of axons and their growth cones, three members of the class were tested for neurotrophic effects on isolated rat spinal motor neurons. Each compound stimulated neurite outgrowth. In addition, consistent with SMA being an axonopathy of motor neurons, the three axonotrophic compounds rescued motor axon development in a zebrafish model of SMA. The results introduce a collection of small molecules as pharmacologic suppressors of SMA-associated phenotypes and nominate specific members of the collection for development as candidate SMA therapeutics. More generally, the results reinforce the perception of SMA as an axonopathy and suggest novel approaches to treating the disease.
Highlights
spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) results from inadequate levels of the ubiquitously expressed protein survival motor neuron protein (SMN) [1]
At the concentrations that rescued motor axon development in Smn-deficient embryos, we found no effect of SBL-154, SBL-185, or SBL-190 on the somite borders of normal larvae
Using motor neuron assays from both vertebrates and invertebrates, we explored the activities of a number of chemical analogs that had been disclosed in the patent literature as modifiers of Ab metabolism
Summary
SMA results from inadequate levels of the ubiquitously expressed protein SMN [1]. Given the expression of SMN throughout the body, it is paradoxical that its deficiency preferentially affects motor neurons in the anterior horn of the spinal cord [2]. Other mechanisms by which reduced SMN levels can adversely affect axonal function involve the interaction of SMN with both plastin 3, which promotes axonogenesis via its effects on actin [11,12], and profilin II, which influences growth cone motility via its effects on actin and ROCK [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22] Through all of these disparate mechanisms, low SMN levels can compromise the function of the distal motor axon and its terminal and thereby contribute to SMA pathology. Agents that enhance the growth, development, and performance of motor axons (i.e., axonotrophic agents) may be therapeutic for SMA
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