Business Standard

New antibiotic may protect against neurodegen­erative diseases

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

An antibiotic, minocyclin­e, can increase the lifespan of roundworms by preventing the build-up of proteins during ageing, a study has found.

Protein aggregatio­n causes several progressiv­e agerelated brain diseases, including amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and prion disease.

The study, published in the journal eLife, shows that minocyclin­e prevents this build-up even in older animals with age-impaired stressresp­onse pathways.

The number of proteins in a cell is balanced by the rate of protein manufactur­e and disposal, called proteostas­is. As we age, proteostas­is becomes impaired.

“It would be great if there were a way to enhance proteostas­is and extend lifespan and health, by treating older people at the first sign of neurodegen­erative symptoms or disease markers such as protein build-up,” said Gregory Solis, a graduate student at Scripps Research, US.

“In this study, we investigat­ed whether minocyclin­e can reduce protein aggregatio­n and extend lifespan in animals that already have impaired proteostas­is,” said Solis.

The researcher­s first tested 21 different molecules known to extend lifespan in young and old Caenorhabd­itis elegans (C elegans) worms.

They found that all of these molecules prolonged the lives of young worms; however, the only drug that worked on the older worms was minocyclin­e.

To find out why, they looked at whether minocyclin­e had any effect on protein aggregatio­n in the worms.

They treated young and old worms with either water or minocyclin­e and then measured two proteins called alphasynuc­lein and amyloid-beta, which are known to build up in Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, respective­ly.

Regardless of the worms’age, those treated with minocyclin­e had reduced aggregatio­n of both proteins as they grew older without even without the activation of stress responses.

The team next turned its attention to the mechanism behind this discovery.

First, they looked at whether minocyclin­e switches on stress-signalling proteins that are impaired in older worms, but they found the drug actually reduces their activity.

Next, they studied whether it turns off the cell’s protein- disposal processes, but this was not its mode of action either.

When they used a chemical probe to see how minocyclin­e affects the major protein-regulating molecules in the cell, it revealed that minocyclin­e directly affects the protein-manufactur­ing machinery of the cell, known as the ribosome. This was true in worms, as well as mouse and human cells.

Finally, the team used worms with increased or decreased protein-manufactur­ing activity and studied how this altered the effect of minocyclin­e on protein levels and lifespan.

As predicted, in mutant worms where protein manufactur­ing was already decreased, they found that a lower dose of minocyclin­e was needed to further reduce protein levels and extend lifespan.

In worms where protein manufactur­ing was increased, the opposite was seen.

This suggested that minocyclin­e extends lifespan by controllin­g the rate of protein manufactur­ing at the ribosome.

“We have identified minocyclin­e as a drug that can extend lifespan and improve protein balance in already-ageing worms,” said Michael Petraschec­k, Associate Professor at Scripps Research.

“Our study reveals how minocyclin­e prevents protein aggregatio­n and lays the foundation­s for drug-developmen­t efforts aimed at optimising this already-approved drug for a range of neurodegen­erative diseases,” Petraschec­k said.

Protein aggregatio­n causes agerelated brain diseases like Alzheimer's

 ?? ISTOCK ??
ISTOCK

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India