Dr. P. Martinez
Maastricht University
Netherlands
Sphingolipids: a novel target in the treatment of Alzheimer Disease?
ZonMw
1,500,000
01/12/2014
4.0
Alzheimer's disease & other dementias
Key features of Alzheimers disease (AD) pathology are aggregates of amyloid-ß peptides, neurofibrillary tangles, blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage and neuroinflammation. Elucidation of the deregulated biological mechanisms that lead to the onset and progression of AD is critical to identify new treatment strategies.
We hypothesize that early in the disease process, an altered balance between the different classes of sphingolipids (SL), including ceramides and sphingomyelins, plays a key role in disease onset and progression. Using a translational approach, we therefore aim to identify the role of SL metabolism in AD and models thereof and reveal if pharmacological modulation of this pathway using already approved drugs is beneficial in slowing down the disease process.
To address this hypothesis we will:
1. Quantify SL and involved enzymes in different forms and subtypes of dementia and correlate the SL levels and enzymatic activity to associated neuropathology, as determined by the level of neuroinflammation, changes at the BBB and neurodegeneration in selected brain regions.
2. Correlate the SL profiles identified in body fluids (plasma and CSF) to clinical features, including cognitive decline in humans and in AD mouse models at different disease stages and during normal brain aging, to identify specific SL patterns that can be used as biomarkers of early disease progression.
3. Explore whether modulation of the SL pathway via existing compounds (FTY-720P, a S1P analogue) reduces inflammatory events and promotes neuronal survival using human in vitro models.
4. Provide the first proof-of-concept that pharmacological modulation of SL metabolism using existing drugs in animal models of AD prevents and/or retards disease progression.
The proposed preclinical studies are essential to:
(i) Identify which asymptomatic elderly individuals might benefit from SL modulation for the prevention or delay of AD.
(ii) Provide the first proof-of-concept data to establish that an approved drug approved for other indications is effective for AD.
(iii) Develop targeted therapies for select patient subgroups by stratifying patients according to their levels of SL metabolites.
(iv) Design targeted clinical trials which can dramatically reduce the number of patients required for the study and the associated costs.
(v) Proceed directly to phase I/II clinical trials in AD with a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved drug, with a novel application in AD.
Ultimately, this research will be the first proof-of-concept study to test the feasibility and relevance of the personalized medicine approach in the area of SL.