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Gene-Regulating
Enzyme Is Also a Target for Anti-Depressive
Drugs:
Anti-Cancer Possibilities Seen for Certain
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
(Philadelphia - June
23, 2006) – In 2005, professor
Ramin Shiekhattar, Ph.D., at The
Wistar Institute and his colleagues
reported details about an enzyme involved
in appropriately repressing sets of neuronal
genes in non-neuronal cells.
At the time, the scientists
noted that the enzyme appeared to fit
into the same extended enzyme family that
includes monoamine oxidases, psychoactive
enzymes that oxidize dopamine and norepinephrin.
Inhibitors of these enzymes have long
been used to treat depression,
other psychiatric and emotional disorders,
and Parkinson’s disease.
Now, in a study published
online today in the June 26 issue of Chemistry
& Biology, Shiekhattar and his
team show that the enzyme is itself a
target for certain monoamine oxidase inhibitors
used to treat depression. One member of
this family of drugs in particular, called
tranylcypromine (brand name Parnate®,
manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline), was
seen to inhibit the enzyme most strongly.
The findings suggest that these anti-depressive
drugs may have additional applications
in other medically relevant areas.
For example, Shiekhattar
notes that the enzyme studied exists in
a complex with another type of gene-regulating
enzyme that has been implicated in the
development of cancer. Inhibitors of that
second enzyme are currently in clinical
trails as cancer therapies
“Might particular
monoamine oxidase inhibitors, currently
used primarily to treat depression, have
anti-cancer activity too?” Shiekhattar
says. “Our findings indicate this
could be the case, and we are currently
screening these drugs against many different
types of cancer to answer that question.”
Because the primary
role of the enzyme is to repress sets
of related genes, many other areas of
potential influence for the monoamine
oxidase inhibitors are possible too, according
to Shiekhattar. At the very least, he
says, the drugs will likely prove to be
useful laboratory tools for answering
fundamental questions about genetic expression.
The enzyme in question
is called BHC110/LSD1, and it was the
first human histone demethylase identified.
The enzyme’s function is to remove
methyl groups from small molecules called
histones to modify them in ways that trigger
gene repression. The second enzyme found
in complex with BHC110/LSD1, acts in a
similar way. Called a deacetylase, this
enzyme removes acetyl groups from histones
to repress gene expression.
In the body’s
scheme for safely storing genes away until
needed, DNA is tightly looped around the
histones, kept secure by enzymes similar
to the ones studied by the Wistar team
until made accessible by the activity
of other enzymes responsible for gene
expression. Eight histones comprise a
nucleosome, and long strings of nucleosomes
coil in turn into chromatin, the basic
material of chromosomes.
The lead author on
the Chemistry & Biology study
is Min Gyu
Lee. Christopher
Wynder is a coauthor. Additional
coauthors at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine are Dawn M. Schmidt
and Dewey G. McCafferty. Senior author
Ramin Shiekhattar is a professor in two
programs at Wistar, the gene expression
and regulation program and molecular and
cellular oncogenesis program. Support
for the research was provided by the National
Institutes of Health.
The Wistar
Institute is an independent nonprofit
biomedical research institution dedicated
to discovering the causes and cures for
major diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular
disease, autoimmune disorders, and infectious
diseases, such as AIDS and influenza.
Founded in 1892 as the first institution
of its kind in the nation, The Wistar
Institute today is a National Cancer Institute-designated
Cancer Center focused on basic and translational
research. Discoveries at Wistar have led
to the creation of vaccines for such diseases
as rabies, rubella, and rotavirus; significant
insights into the mechanisms of skin,
brain, breast, lung, and prostate cancers;
and the development of monoclonal antibodies
and other important research technologies
and tools. The Wistar Institute: Today’s
Discoveries – Tomorrow’s Cures.
On the web at www.wistar.org.
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