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Treatment of Gaucher disease with an enzyme inhibitor

Glycoconj J. 1996 Apr;13(2):153-7. doi: 10.1007/BF00731489.

Abstract

The hypothesis is offered predicting that Gaucher patients could be treated with a drug that slows the synthesis of glucosylceramide, the lipid that accumulates in this disorder. The present therapeutic approach involves augmenting the defective enzyme, glucosylceramide beta-glucosidase, with exogenous beta-glucosidase isolated from human tissue. This spectacularly expensive mode of treatment should be replaceable with a suitable enzyme inhibitor that simply slows formation of the lipid and matches the rate of synthesis with the rate of the defective, slowly working beta-glucosidase. Several drugs that possess this ability are available, the best known of which is 1-phenyl-2-decanoylamino-3-morpholino-1-propanol (PDMP), a designer inhibitor that resembles the synthase's substrate and product. PDMP has been found to be effective in mice, rats, fish, and a wide variety of cultured cells. Its use, at suitable dosages, seems to be harmless, although long-term tests have not been made. The lack of suitable animal models of Gaucher disease has made it difficult to test the hypothesis adequately, but PDMP does rapidly lower the levels of glucosylceramide in normal animal tissues and the animals evidently do well with the lowered levels of glucosylceramide and its more complex glycolipid metabolites.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cells, Cultured
  • Enzyme Inhibitors / pharmacology
  • Enzyme Inhibitors / therapeutic use*
  • Enzyme Inhibitors / toxicity
  • Fishes
  • Gaucher Disease / drug therapy*
  • Glucosylceramidase / antagonists & inhibitors*
  • Humans
  • Mice
  • Morpholines / pharmacology
  • Morpholines / therapeutic use*
  • Morpholines / toxicity
  • Rats

Substances

  • Enzyme Inhibitors
  • Morpholines
  • RV 538
  • Glucosylceramidase