Authors
Michal Geva, Rebecca Kusko, Holly Soares, Kevin D Fowler, Tal Birnberg, Steve Barash, Avia Merenlender -Wagner, Tania Fine, Andrew Lysaght, Brian Weiner, Yoonjeong Cha, Sarah Kolitz, Fadi Towfic, Aric Orbach, Ralph Laufer, Ben Zeskind, Iris Grossman, Michael R Hayden
Publication date
2016/9/15
Journal
Human molecular genetics
Volume
25
Issue
18
Pages
3975-3987
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Pridopidine has demonstrated improvement in Huntington Disease (HD) motor symptoms as measured by secondary endpoints in clinical trials. Originally described as a dopamine stabilizer, this mechanism is insufficient to explain the clinical and preclinical effects of pridopidine. This study therefore explored pridopidine’s potential mechanisms of action. The effect of pridopidine versus sham treatment on genome-wide expression profiling in the rat striatum was analysed and compared to the pathological expression profile in Q175 knock-in (Q175 KI) vs Q25 WT mouse models. A broad, unbiased pathway analysis was conducted, followed by testing the enrichment of relevant pathways. Pridopidine upregulated the BDNF pathway (P = 1.73E-10), and its effect on BDNF secretion was sigma 1 receptor (S1R) dependent. Many of the same genes were independently found to be downregulated in Q175 KI mice …
Total citations
2017201820192020202120222023202471617121617153
Scholar articles
M Geva, R Kusko, H Soares, KD Fowler, T Birnberg… - Human molecular genetics, 2016