Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6022087 | Neurobiology of Disease | 2014 | 9 Pages |
â¢Vacuolization and impaired autophagy are characteristic of human s-IBM muscle.â¢s-IBM muscle also has increased: Aβ42, Aβ42-oligomers and γ-secretase activity.â¢Autophagy-impaired cultured human muscle fibers (CHMFs) have similar abnormalities.â¢NaPB treatment of CHMFs improves autophagy, and decreases Aβ42 and γ-secretase.â¢NaPB, an otherwise-approved drug, can be considered for treating s-IBM patients.
Sporadic inclusion-body myositis (s-IBM) is a severe, progressive muscle disease for which there is no enduring treatment. Pathologically characteristic are vacuolated muscle fibers having: accumulations of multi-protein aggregates, including amyloid-β(Aβ) 42 and its toxic oligomers; increased γ-secretase activity; and impaired autophagy. Cultured human muscle fibers with experimentally-impaired autophagy recapitulate some of the s-IBM muscle abnormalities, including vacuolization and decreased activity of lysosomal enzymes, accompanied by increased Aβ42, Aβ42 oligomers, and increased γ-secretase activity. Sodium phenylbutyrate (NaPB) is an orally bioavailable small molecule approved by the FDA for treatment of urea-cycle disorders. Here we describe that NaPB treatment reverses lysosomal dysfunction in an in vitro model of inclusion-body myositis, involving cultured human muscle fibers. NaPB treatment improved lysosomal activity, decreased Aβ42 and its oligomers, decreased γ-secretase activity, and virtually prevented muscle-fiber vacuolization. Accordingly, NaPB might be considered a potential treatment of s-IBM patients.