Vitner_2014_Nat.Med_20_204

Reference

Title : RIPK3 as a potential therapeutic target for Gaucher's disease - Vitner_2014_Nat.Med_20_204
Author(s) : Vitner EB , Salomon R , Farfel-Becker T , Meshcheriakova A , Ali M , Klein AD , Platt FM , Cox TM , Futerman AH
Ref : Nat Med , 20 :204 , 2014
Abstract :

Gaucher's disease (GD), an inherited metabolic disorder caused by mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene (GBA), is the most common lysosomal storage disease. Heterozygous mutations in GBA are a major risk factor for Parkinson's disease. GD is divided into three clinical subtypes based on the absence (type 1) or presence (types 2 and 3) of neurological signs. Type 1 GD was the first lysosomal storage disease (LSD) for which enzyme therapy became available, and although infusions of recombinant glucocerebrosidase (GCase) ameliorate the systemic effects of GD, the lack of efficacy for the neurological manifestations, along with the considerable expense and inconvenience of enzyme therapy for patients, renders the search for alternative or complementary therapies paramount. Glucosylceramide and glucosylsphingosine accumulation in the brain leads to massive neuronal loss in patients with neuronopathic GD (nGD) and in nGD mouse models. However, the mode of neuronal death is not known. Here, we show that modulating the receptor-interacting protein kinase-3 (Ripk3) pathway markedly improves neurological and systemic disease in a mouse model of GD. Notably, Ripk3 deficiency substantially improved the clinical course of GD mice, with increased survival and motor coordination and salutary effects on cerebral as well as hepatic injury.

PubMedSearch : Vitner_2014_Nat.Med_20_204
PubMedID: 24441827

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Citations formats

Vitner EB, Salomon R, Farfel-Becker T, Meshcheriakova A, Ali M, Klein AD, Platt FM, Cox TM, Futerman AH (2014)
RIPK3 as a potential therapeutic target for Gaucher's disease
Nat Med 20 :204

Vitner EB, Salomon R, Farfel-Becker T, Meshcheriakova A, Ali M, Klein AD, Platt FM, Cox TM, Futerman AH (2014)
Nat Med 20 :204