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Tuesday 25 June 2019

Learning from GABAa Dysfunction in Huntington’s Disease – useful ideas for Autism therapies?



Today’s post is really for the regular readers of this blog who are interested in the GABA switch and Bumetanide. It is not light reading.  We see how advanced some Taiwanese researchers are in their understanding of GABAA dysfunctions in Huntington’s Disease.




Taipei 101, briefly the world’s tallest building


It is an excellent paper and much of it is applicable to autism. There are some omissions, but you will struggle to find a more complete paper.

They even go into the detail of altered the sub-unit expression of GABAA receptors that occurs as the disease progresses. I think that correcting sub-unit miss-expression has great potential in treating some autism.

Huntington’s is an inherited brain disorder that first manifests itself around the age of 40 and then progresses for the next 15 to 20 years.

Much autism is present prior to birth but there is a progression that occurs as the brain develops in early childhood. Some people do seem to be entirely typical at birth and only around 2 years old develop symptoms. After 5 years old you cannot really develop “autism”, just the symptoms might not get noticed till later in life.
Schizophrenia only develops in early to mid-adulthood.

It is surprising to many people that such varied disorders share some similar aspects of biology.

In terms of practical interventions, in today’s paper these include:       

·        Inhibition of NKCC1 (bumetanide)
·        Activation of KCC2 (N-Ethylmaleimide)
·        Enhancer of CKB (creatine)
·        Inhibitor of WNK/SPAK
·        Activation of extra-synaptic GABAa receptors (taurine, progesterone)
·        Activation of synaptic GABAa receptors (zolpidem, alprazolam)
·        Inhibition of GABA transport mechanism (Tiagabine)

One thing to note is that activating GABAa receptors may well have a negative effect in some people.

Sub-unit specific therapies, like very low dose clonazepam targeting α3, are not mentioned in this paper, nor is the role of GABAb on NKCC1/KCC2 expression.

We are familiar with Bumetanide as an NKCC1 blocker intervention in autism, but looking at the list there are other common autism therapies (creatine and taurine) and the female hormone progesterone. We come upon the beneficial effect of female hormones on a regular basis in this blog (estradiol, pregnenalone, progesterone …).  We even saw how a sub-SSRI dose of Prozac increases the amount of the neurosteroid 3α-hydroxy-5α-pregnan-20-one (Allo) that potently, positively, and allosterically modulates GABA action at GABAA receptors. Progesterone is converted to Allo in the body.
 
Here is the excellent paper on Huntington’s:-






                                                                                                               

An overview of the g-aminobutyric acid (GABA) signalling system. (a) GABA homeostasis is regulated by neurons and astrocytes. GABA is synthesized by GAD65/67 from glutamate in neurons, while astrocytic GABA is synthesized through MAOB. The release of GABA is mediated by membrane depolarization in neurons and Best1 in astrocytes. The reuptake of GABA is mediated through GAT1 in neurons and GAT3 in astrocytes. The metabolism of GABA is mediated by GABA-T in neurons and astrocytes. The reuptake of GABA in astrocytes is further transformed into glutamine via the TCA cycle and glutamine synthetase (GS). The glutamine is then transported to neurons and converted to glutamate for regeneration of GABA.



(b) GABAA receptors are heteropentameric complexes assembled from 19 different subunits. The compositions of different subunits determines the subcellular distributions and functional properties of the receptors. Phasic inhibition is mediated via the activation of synaptic GABAA receptors following brief exposure to a high concentration of extracellular GABA. Tonic inhibition is mediated via the activation of extrasynaptic GABAA receptors by a low concentration of ambient GABA.






c) The excitatory inhibitory response of GABA is driven by the chloride gradient across cell membranes, which can be determined via two cation–chloride cotransporters (NKCC1 and KCC2). The high expression of NKCC1 during the developmental stage maintains higher intracellular [Cl2] via chloride influx to the cell. The activation of GABAA receptors at an early developmental stage results in an outward flow of chloride and an excitatory GABAergic response. As neurons mature, the high expression of KCC2 maintains lower intracellular [Cl2] via chloride efflux out of the cell. The activation of GABAA receptors on mature neurons results in the inward flow of chloride and an inhibitory GABAergic response.



An excerpt showing data on sub-unit misexpression in different parts of the brain at different stages of the disease



5.2. Modulation of chloride homeostasis via cation – chloride cotransporters
Emerging evidence suggests that chloride homeostasis is a therapeutic target for HD. Pharmacological agents that target cation–chloride cotransporters (i.e. NKCC1 or KCC2) therefore might be used to treat HD (figure 3b). Of note, dysregulation of cation–chloride cotransporters and GABA polarity was associated with several neuropsychiatric disorders [70,134–139] (reviewed in [27,140]). Such abnormal excitatory GABAA receptor neurotransmission can be rescued by bumetanide, an NKCC1 inhibitor that decreases intracellular chloride concentration. Bumetanide is an FDA-approved diuretic agent that has been used in the clinic. It attenuates many neurological and psychiatric disorders in preclinical studies and some clinical trials for traumatic brain injury, seizure, chronic pain, cerebral infarction, Down syndrome, schizophrenia, fragile X syndrome and autism (reviewed in [141]). Daily intraperitoneal injections of bumetanide also restored the impaired motor function of HD mice. The effect of bumetanide is likely to be mediated by NKCC1 because genetic ablation of NKCC1 in the striatum also rescued the motor deficits in R6/2 mice. This study uncovered a previously unrecognized depolarizing or excitatory action of GABA in the aberrant motor control in HD. In addition, chronic treatment with bumetanide also improved the impaired memory in R6/2 mice [69], supporting the importance of NKCC1 in HD pathogenesis. Owing to the poor ability of bumetanide to pass through the blood–brain barrier, further optimization of bumetanide and other NKCC1 inhibitors is warranted [142,143]. Disruption of KCC2 function is detrimental to inhibitory transmission and agents to activate KCC2 function would be beneficial in HD. However, no agonist of KCC2 has been described until very recently [144,145]. A new KCC2 agonist (CLP290) has been shown to facilitate functional recovery after spinal cord injury [145]. It would be of great interest to evaluate the effect of KCC2 agonists on HD progression. Another KCC2 activator, CLP257, was found to increase the cell surface expression of KCC2 in a rat model of neuropathic pain [146]. Post-translational modification of KCC2 by kinases may modulate the function of KCC2. The WNK/ SPAK kinase complex, composed of WNK (with no lysine) and SPAK (SPS1-related proline/alanine-rich kinase), is known to phosphorylate and stimulate NKCC1 or inhibit KCC2 [147]. Thus, compounds that inhibit WNK/SPAK kinases will result in KCC2 activation and NKCC1 inhibition. Some compounds have been noted as potential inhibitors of WNK/SPAK kinases and need to be further tested for their effects on cation –chloride cotransporters [148–150]. An alternative mechanism to activate KCC2 is manipulation of its interacting proteins (e.g. CKB [65,66]). Because CKB could activate the function of KCC2 [65,66], CKB enhancers may increase the function of KCC2. In HD, reduced expression and activity of CKB is associated with motor deficits and hearing impairment [68,88]. Enhancing CKB activity by creatine supplements ameliorated the motor deficits and hearing impairment of HD mice. It is worthwhile to further investigate the interaction of KCC2 and CKB in GABAergic neurotransmission and motor deficits in HD. The depolarizing GABA action with altered expression levels of NKCC1 or KCC2 is associated with neuroinflammation in HD brains [32,69]. Blockade of TNF-a using Xpro1595 (a dominant negative inhibitor of soluble TNF-a) [151] in vivo led to significant beneficial effects on disease progression in HD mice [152] and reduced the expression of NKCC1. It would be of great interest to test the effect of other anti-inflammatory agents [153] on the function and expression of NKCC1 and GABAergic inhibition. Neuroinflammation is implicated in most neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease [154,155], and the interaction of cation–chloride cotransporters and neuroinflammation in GABAergic neurotransmission may also play a critical role in other neurodegenerative diseases.






Figure 2. Molecular mechanism(s) underlying the abnormal GABAAergic system in HD. (a) In the normal condition, adult neurons express high KCC2 and few NKCC1 to maintain the lower intracellular chloride concentration, which results in an inward flow of chloride when GABAA receptors are activated. Astrocytes function normally for the homeostasis of glutamate, potassium and glutamate/GABA-glutamine cycle. (b) In Huntington’s disease, reduced GABAA receptor-mediated neuronal inhibition is associated with enhanced NKCC1 expression and a decreased expression in KCC2 and membrane localized GABAA receptors. The dysregulated GABAAergic system might be caused by mutant HTT, excitotoxicity, neuroinflammation or other factors. Mutant HTT in neurons alters the transcription of genes (GABAAR and KCC2) through interactions with transcriptional activators (SP1) and repressors (REST/NRSF). Mutant HTT in neurons also disrupts the intracellular trafficking of GABAARs to the cellular membrane. HD astrocytes have impaired homeostasis of extracellular potassium/glutamate (due to deficits of astrocytic Kir4.1 channel and glutamate transporters, Glt-1) and cause neuronal excitability, which might be related to the changes of KCC2, NKCC1 and GABAAR. The activity of KCC2 could be affected through its interacting proteins, such as CKB and mHTT. Neuroinflammation, which is evoked by the interaction of HD astrocyte and microglia, enhances NKCC1 expression in neurons at the transcriptional level through an NF-kB-dependent pathway. HD astrocytes also have compromised astrocytic metabolism of glutamate/GABA–glutamine cycle that contributes to lower GABA synthesis.


Notably, neuroinflammation and the GABA neurotransmitter system are reciprocally regulated in the brain (reviewed in [104,105]). Specifically, neuroinflammation induces changes in the GABA neurotransmitter system, such as reduced GABAA receptor subunit expression, while activation
of GABAA receptors likely antagonizes inflammation.

TNF-a, a proinflammatory cytokine, induces a downregulation of the surface expression of GABAARs containing a1, a2, b2/3 and g2 subunits and a decrease in inhibitory synaptic strength in a cellular model of hippocampal neuron culture [106]. The same group further demonstrated that protein phosphatase 1-dependent trafficking of GABAARs was involved in the TNF-a evoked downregulation of GABAergic neurotransmission [107]. Upregulation of TNF-a also negatively impacts the expression of GABAAR a2 subunit mRNA and thus decreases the presynaptic inhibition in the dorsal root ganglion in a rat experimental neuropathic painmodel [108]. Conversely, blockade of central GABAARs in mice by aGABAAR antagonist increased both the basal and restraint stress-induced plasma IL-6 levels [109]. Inhibition of GABAAR activation by picrotoxin increased the nuclear translocation of NF-kB in acute hippocampal slice preparations [110]. Collectively, neuroinflammation
weakens the inhibitory synaptic strength in neurons, at least partly, through the reduction of GABAARs.

The reduced expression and function of GABAARs may further increase inflammatory responses. It remains elusive whether the same mechanism occurs in the inflammatory environment in HD brains.


hyperexcitability resulting from deficiency of astrocytic Kir4.1 might have also contributed to neuronal NKCC1 upregulation and altered GABAergic signalling in HD brains.




Figure 3. Strategy to target (a) GABAAR and (b) cation–chloride cotransporters as potential therapeutic avenues. (a) The GABAergic system is influenced directly by agents that (1) target synaptic GABAAR, (2) increase tonic GABA current or interfere with synaptic GABA concentrations via a reduction of GABA reuptake (3), and (4) block GABA metabolism.

5.1. Modulating the GABAA receptor as a therapeutic target

In view of the presently discovered HD-related deficit in the GABA system, the question arises whether HD patients can benefit from drugs that stimulate the GABA system (figure 3a). HD patients suffer from motor abnormalities and
non-motor symptoms, including cognitive deficits, psychiatric symptoms, sleep disturbance, irritability, anxiety, depression and an increased incidence of seizures [74,77,116,117].
Seizures are a well-established part of juvenile HD but no more prevalent in adult-onset HD than in the general population [73,74,118]. Several pharmacological compounds can enhance inhibitory GABAergic neurotransmission by targeting GABAAR and thereby producing sedative, anxiolytic, anticonvulsant and muscle-relaxant effects. A recent study demonstrated that zolpidem, a GABAAR modulator that enhances GABA inhibition mainly via the a1-containing GABAA receptors, corrected sleep disturbance and electroencephalographic abnormalities in symptomatic HD mice (R6/2) [119]. Alprazolam, a benzodiazepine-activating GABA receptor, reversed the dysregulated circadian rhythms and improved cognitive performance of HD mice (R6/2) [120].
In addition, progesterone, a positive modulator of GABAAR, significantly reversed the behavioural impairment in a 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP)-induced HD rat model [121]. Apart from modulating the activity of the GABAergic system by interfering directly with the receptor, pharmacological agents can also interfere with synaptic GABA concentrations. Tiagabine, a drug that specifically blocks the GABA transporter (GAT1) to increase synaptic GABA level,was found to improve motor performance and extend survival inN171-82Q and R6/2 mice [122]. It is also worth evaluating whether vigabatrin, a GABA-T inhibitor that blocksGABAcatabolismin neurons and astrocytes [123], plays a role in the compromised astrocytic glutamate–GABA–glutamine cycling [56]. Interestingly, taurine exerted GABAA agonistic and antioxidant activities in a 3-NP HD model and improved locomotor deficits and increased GABA levels [124]. However, several early studies failed to provide the expected benefits of GABA analogues in slowing disease progression in HD patients [125–127]. For example, gaboxadol, an agonist for the extrasynaptic d-containing GABAA receptor, failed to improve the decline in cognitive and motor functions of five HD patients during a short two-week trial, but it caused side effects at the maximal dose [125]. Interestingly, although treatment with muscimol (a potent agonist of GABA receptors) did not improve motor or cognitive deficits in 10HDpatients, it did ameliorate chorea in the most severely hyperkinetic patient [126]. The therapeutic failure of GABA stimulation in early clinical trials does not argue against the importance of GABAergic deficits in HD pathogenesis. The alteration of GABAergic circuits plays a primary role or is a compensatory response to excitotoxicity, and it may contribute to HD by disrupting the balance between the excitation and inhibition systems and the overall functions of neuronal circuits. Because the subunits of the GABAA receptor are brain region- or neuron subtypespecific, the choice of drugs may have distinct effects on the brain region or neuronal population targeted [128–130]. For example, the expression of GABAAR subunits is differentially altered in MSNs and other striatal interneurons in HD 54,60]. The early involvement of D2-expressing MSNs can cause chorea [131], while dysfunctional PV-expressing interneurons can cause dystonia in HD patients [132]. Specific alteration in neuronal populations and receptor subtypes during HD progression needs to be taken into consideration when treating the dysfunction of GABAergic circuitry.
Notably, striatal tonic inhibition mediated by the dcontaining GABAARs may have neuroprotective effects against excitotoxicity in the adult striatum [63]. Because the reductions in d-containing GABAARs and tonic GABA currents in D2-expressing MSNs have been observed in early HD [32,39,40,54,61], it would be of great interest to evaluate the effects of several available compounds, such as alphaxalone and ganaxolone [133], that target d-containing GABAARs, in animal models of HD.





(b) GABAAR-mediated signalling in HD neurons is depolarizing due to the high intracellular chloride concentration caused by high NKCC1 expression and low KCC2 expression. Rescuing the function of cation–chloride cotransporters can occur via (1) inhibition of NKCC1 activity using bumetanide, (2, 3) increase in KCC2 function using a KCC2 activator or CKB enhancer, and (4) inhibitors of WNK/SPAK kinases.


5.2. Modulation of chloride homeostasis via cation–chloride cotransporters

Emerging evidence suggests that chloride homeostasis is a therapeutic target for HD. Pharmacological agents that target cation–chloride cotransporters (i.e.NKCC1 orKCC2) therefore might be used to treat HD (figure 3b). Of note, dysregulation of cation–chloride cotransporters and GABA polarity was associated with several neuropsychiatric disorders [70,134–139] (reviewed in [27,140]). Such abnormal   receptor neurotransmission can be rescued by bumetanide, an NKCC1 inhibitor that decreases intracellular chloride concentration. Bumetanide is an FDA-approved diuretic agent that has been used in the clinic. It attenuates many neurological and psychiatric disorders in preclinical studies and some clinical trials for traumatic brain injury, seizure, chronic pain, cerebral infarction, Down syndrome, schizophrenia, fragile X syndrome and autism (reviewed in [141]). Daily intraperitoneal injections of bumetanide also restored the impaired motor function ofHDmice (R6/2, Y-T Hsu,Y-GChang, Y-CLi, K-YWang, H-MChen, D-J Lee, C-HTsai, C-C Lien,YChern 2018, personal communication). The effect of bumetanide is likely to be mediated by NKCC1 because genetic ablation of NKCC1 in the striatum also rescued the motor deficits in R6/2 mice (Y-T Hsu, Y-G Chang, Y-C Li, K-Y Wang, H-M Chen, D-J Lee, C-H Tsai, C-C Lien, Y Chern 2018, personal communication). This study uncovered a previously unrecognized depolarizing or excitatory action of GABA in the aberrant motor control in HD. In addition, chronic treatment with bumetanide also improved the impaired memory in R6/2 mice [69], supporting the importance of NKCC1 in HD pathogenesis. Owing to the poor ability of bumetanide to pass through the blood–brain barrier, further optimization of bumetanide and other NKCC1 inhibitors is warranted [142,143].
Disruption of KCC2 function is detrimental to inhibitory transmission and agents to activate KCC2 function would be beneficial in HD. However, no agonist of KCC2 has been described until very recently [144,145]. A new KCC2 agonist (CLP290) has been shown to facilitate functional recovery after spinal cord injury [145]. It would be of great interest to evaluate the effect of KCC2 agonists on HD progression. Another KCC2 activator, CLP257, was found to increase the cell surface expression of KCC2 in a rat model of neuropathic pain [146]. Post-translational modification of KCC2 by kinases may modulate the function of KCC2. The WNK/SPAK kinase complex, composed of WNK (with no lysine) and SPAK (SPS1-related proline/alanine-rich kinase), is known to phosphorylate and stimulate NKCC1 or inhibit KCC2 [147]. Thus, compounds that inhibit WNK/SPAK kinases will result in KCC2 activation and NKCC1 inhibition.
Some compounds have been noted as potential inhibitors of WNK/SPAK kinases and need to be further tested for their effects on cation–chloride cotransporters [148–150]. An alternative mechanism to activate KCC2 is manipulation of its interacting proteins (e.g. CKB [65,66]). Because CKB could activate the function of KCC2 [65,66], CKB enhancers may increase the function of KCC2. In HD, reduced expression and activity of CKB is associated with motor deficits and hearing impairment [68,88]. Enhancing CKB activity by creatine supplements ameliorated the motor deficits and hearing impairment of HD mice. It is worthwhile to further investigate the interaction of KCC2 and CKB in GABAergic neurotransmission and motor deficits in HD. The depolarizing GABA action with altered expression levels of NKCC1 or KCC2 is associated with neuroinflammation in HD brains [32,69]. Blockade of TNF-a using Xpro1595 (a dominant negative inhibitor of soluble TNF-a) [151] in vivo led to significant beneficial effects on disease progression in HD mice [152] and reduced the expression of NKCC1It would be of great interest to test the effect of other anti-inflammatory agents [153] on the function and expression of NKCC1 and GABAergic inhibition. Neuroinflammation is implicated in most neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease [154,155], and the interaction of cation–chloride cotransporters and neuroinflammation in GABAergic neurotransmission may also play a critical role in other neurodegenerative diseases.




Discovery of Novel SPAK Inhibitors That Block WNK Kinase Signaling to Cation Chloride Transporters

Upon activation by with-no-lysine kinases, STE20/SPS1-related proline–alanine-rich protein kinase (SPAK) phosphorylates and activates SLC12A transporters such as the Na+-Cl cotransporter (NCC) and Na+-K+-2Cl cotransporter type 1 (NKCC1) and type 2 (NKCC2); these transporters have important roles in regulating BP through NaCl reabsorption and vasoconstriction. SPAK knockout mice are viable and display hypotension with decreased activity (phosphorylation) of NCC and NKCC1 in the kidneys and aorta, respectively. Therefore, agents that inhibit SPAK activity could be a new class of antihypertensive drugs with dual actions (i.e., NaCl diuresis and vasodilation). In this study, we developed a new ELISA-based screening system to find novel SPAK inhibitors and screened >20,000 small-molecule compounds. Furthermore, we used a drug repositioning strategy to identify existing drugs that inhibit SPAK activity. As a result, we discovered one small-molecule compound (Stock 1S-14279) and an antiparasitic agent (Closantel) that inhibited SPAK-regulated phosphorylation and activation of NCC and NKCC1 in vitro and in mice. Notably, these compounds had structural similarity and inhibited SPAK in an ATP-insensitive manner. We propose that the two compounds found in this study may have great potential as novel antihypertensive drugs.


Chemical library screening for WNK signalling inhibitors using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy.


WNKs (with-no-lysine kinases) are the causative genes of a hereditary hypertensive disease, PHAII (pseudohypoaldosteronism type II), and form a signal cascade with OSR1 (oxidative stress-responsive 1)/SPAK (STE20/SPS1-related proline/alanine-rich protein kinase) and Slc12a (solute carrier family 12) transporters. We have shown that this signal cascade regulates blood pressure by controlling vascular tone as well as renal NaCl excretion. Therefore agents that inhibit this signal cascade could be a new class of antihypertensive drugs. Since the binding of WNK to OSR1/SPAK kinases was postulated to be important for signal transduction, we sought to discover inhibitors of WNK/SPAK binding by screening chemical compounds that disrupt the binding. For this purpose, we developed a high-throughput screening method using fluorescent correlation spectroscopy. As a result of screening 17000 compounds, we discovered two novel compounds that reproducibly disrupted the binding of WNK to SPAK. Both compounds mediated dose-dependent inhibition of hypotonicity-induced activation of WNK, namely the phosphorylation of SPAK and its downstream transporters NKCC1 (Na/K/Cl cotransporter 1) and NCC (NaCl cotransporter) in cultured cell lines. The two compounds could be the promising seeds of new types of antihypertensive drugs, and the method that we developed could be applied as a general screening method to identify compounds that disrupt the binding of two molecules.







N-Ethylmaleimide increases KCC2 cotransporter activity by modulating transporter phosphorylation


K+/Cl cotransporter 2 (KCC2) is selectively expressed in the adult nervous system and allows neurons to maintain low intracellular Cl levels. Thus, KCC2 activity is an essential prerequisite for fast hyperpolarizing synaptic inhibition mediated by type A γ-aminobutyric acid (GABAA) receptors, which are Cl-permeable, ligand-gated ion channels. Consistent with this, deficits in the activity of KCC2 lead to epilepsy and are also implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders, neuropathic pain, and schizophrenia. Accordingly, there is significant interest in developing activators of KCC2 as therapeutic agents. To provide insights into the cellular processes that determine KCC2 activity, we have investigated the mechanism by which N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) enhances transporter activity using a combination of biochemical and electrophysiological approaches. Our results revealed that, within 15 min, NEM increased cell surface levels of KCC2 and modulated the phosphorylation of key regulatory residues within the large cytoplasmic domain of KCC2 in neurons. More specifically, NEM increased the phosphorylation of serine 940 (Ser-940), whereas it decreased phosphorylation of threonine 1007 (Thr-1007). NEM also reduced with no lysine (WNK) kinase phosphorylation of Ste20-related proline/alanine-rich kinase (SPAK), a kinase that directly phosphorylates KCC2 at residue Thr-1007. Mutational analysis revealed that Thr-1007 dephosphorylation mediated the effects of NEM on KCC2 activity. Collectively, our results suggest that compounds that either increase the surface stability of KCC2 or reduce Thr-1007 phosphorylation may be of use as enhancers of KCC2 activity.


                                                                  


Tiagabine (trade name Gabitril) is n anticonvulsant medication produced by Cephalon that is used in the treatment of epilepsy. The drug is also used off-label in the treatment of anxiety disorders and panic disorder.

Tiagabine is approved by U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as an adjunctive treatment for partial seizures in individuals of age 12 and up. It may also be prescribed off-label by physicians to treat anxiety disorders and panic disorder as well as neuropathic pain (including fibromyalgia). For anxiety and neuropathic pain, tiagabine is used primarily to augment other treatments. Tiagabine may be used alongside selective serotonin reuptake inhibitorsserotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors, or benzodiazepines for anxiety, or antidepressantsgabapentin, other anticonvulsants, or opioids for neuropathic pain.[4]
Tiagabine increases the level of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, by blocking the GABA transporter 1 (GAT-1), and hence is classified as a GABA reuptake inhibitor (GRI).


Conclusion

Today’s post shows how you need to read well beyond the autism research, not to miss something useful.

Some of today’s suggested therapies for Huntington’s are likely to help some types of autism, but some will certainly have a negative effect in some people.  For example, increasing the amount of GABA in the CNS would do my son no good at all.

The emerging field of drugs that enhance KCC2 should be very beneficial to all those with autism who are bumetanide responders.

Enhancing CKB with creatine is interesting. Creatine is a muscle building supplement used by body builders and some DAN doctors. It does have interactions at high doses.







19 comments:

  1. Hi Peter,
    I have autism and PTSD, among other things, and was able to get a prescription for 90 days of clemastine 2.68mg, but both CVS and Walgreens are telling me that it's unorderable; but when I checked the discontinuation and shortage list on the FDA's website it wasn't in the list. Walgreens said their vendor is amerisource, CVS didn't tell me there's, I don't know if that helps anyways.

    I was wondering if you know any pharmacies that would be able to fill it. I ordered Indian clamist otc 6 months ago off eBay before I had a script, but I was hoping to avoid the cost of getting it that way because I don't have much of an income at all.

    Thank you so much, you're blog is amazing and has helped me so very much!

    -Martin

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Martin, I am told that in the US you have to ask for Clemastine by Teva. Teva is a large producer of generic drugs. Ask the pharmacist where to get drugs made by Teva.

      Delete
  2. Peter, do you know if the script has to be written for Teva clemastine no substitutes? I've been so confused because both CVS and Walgreens list online as having it but then they both say they can't order it. I'm also on clobetasol topical as needed,and vesicare/solifenacin. I've seen studies showing that they both promote remyelination in MS, is it possible that these could also help myelin dysfunction in autism? I have some other questions but I don't want to be annoying.
    Thank you

    -Martin

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think in the US the only Clemastine currently available is by Teva. I think you need to ask a local pharmacist.

      The solifenacin is more likely to have an effect than the topical cream. I have no idea how large the dose needed would be in a human.

      Clemastine is doing 2 different things that may help. One is improved myelination and the other is shifting activated microglia to their resting state.

      I would start with Clemastine.

      Delete
  3. Finally got around to reading this blog post and noticed creatine being mentioned as having a positive impact on neuronal chloride homeostasis. Interestingly enough I have supplemented creatine for my son for a long time for other reasons.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interesting Tyler, what dose have you been using?
      Valentina

      Delete
  4. Please make me clear how does it work?

    ReplyDelete
  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
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    ReplyDelete
  7. Please Peter, can you solve this puzzle for me?
    You know my working hypothesis is “hypofunctioning NMDArs” or maybe even “childhood schizophrenia-type of autism”.
    We know that NMDArs drive/modulate inhibitory circuits. What I really want to understand is this bridge from NMDArs up/down to GABA/KCC2/NKCC1 and you are the true expert on the latter.

    Here is an old paper (2009) that is really bugging me, because I partly understand it and partly not. Maybe the authors’ results are correct, but their conclusion is wrong.

    Contribution of K+–Cl− cotransporter 2 in MK-801-induced impairment of long term potentiation
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0166432809001454
    (paywalled)

    First, they treated rats with a NMDAr antagonist during childhood to model schizophrenia. Then they saw that this reduced basal KCC2 levels later in life.
    At that point they tried Furosemide, the NKCC1 + KCC2 antagonist, to partly rescue LTP. When successful they concluded that it had to do with the KCC2 antagonism.

    “we found that MK-801 treatment significantly decreased the basal expression of KCC2 in the hippocampus of rat [..] consistent with the GABAergic disinhibition in schizophrenia [..]
    we further found that the KCC2 level remained unchanged following LTP induction in MK-801-treated rats unlike the downregulation induced by LTP induction in normal rats. [..]
    our results indicated that the KCC2 expression was not further decreased during LTP induction [..]
    Therefore, maintenance [=non-change of] of KCC2 expression during LTP induction maybe contributes to LTP impairment [..]
    In addition, impairment of LTP-induced by MK-801 treatment was significantly recovered by furosemide, an antagonist of KCC2.”

    My real question is of course: Do you think Furosemide, and not Bumetanide was the right choice here? Bumetanide has showed 'none' to 'some' effect in trials for schizophrenia.

    /Ling

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Furosemide blocks KCC2 and NKCC1 and has an inhibitory effect on alpha4- and alpha6-containing GABAAR. One of these effects was helpful in this rat model of schizophrenia.

      It would have been useful if that had also used bumetanide (more effect on NKCC1 than KCC2).

      As the paper states “expression of NKKC1 is decreased to a very low level in mature neurons”, but are neurons in schizophrenia mature or immature?

      The first sentence of the introduction states “Cognitive deficits are now considered to be the core features of schizophrenia”. We know that immature neurons produce cognitive deficits.

      Your SATB2 gene is both an autism gene and a schizophrenia gene. This is a good example of how schizophrenia and autism should not be considered opposites, as in the other paper you recently highlighted; rather Autism, Schizophrenia, Bipolar and ADHD are overlapping.

      Genes regulated by SATB2 during neurodevelopment contribute to schizophrenia and educational attainment.
      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6097700/

      "This study demonstrates that single gene findings from GWAS can provide important insights to pathobiological processes. In this case we find evidence that genes influenced by SATB2 and involved in synaptic transmission, axon guidance and formation of the corpus callosum are contributing to schizophrenia and cognition."

      It is interesting that furosemide benefited rats and you would hope a clinician would trial furosemide in humans with schizophrenia.

      In the case of humans with SATB2 associated syndrome, it certainly make sense to trial Bumetanide and why not Furosemide. These are both cheap safe drugs, that might substantially improve cognition.

      Delete
    2. Just to add

      α6-Containing GABAA Receptors Are the Principal Mediators of Inhibitory Synapse Strengthening by Insulin in Cerebellar Granule Cells
      https://www.jneurosci.org/content/35/26/9676

      "Insulin, strengthens inhibitory synapses by recruiting α6-containing GABARs"

      "Pharmacological block of α6-containing GABARs abolishes synapse strengthening"

      "furosemide will selectively block α6-containing receptors"

      Delete
    3. Furosemide interactions with brain GABAA receptors
      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1564522/

      In conclusion, the present results indicate that furosemide is a subtype-selective GABAA antagonist with a mode of action not shared by several other antagonists, which makes furosemide a unique compound for development of potential GABAA receptor subtype-specific and -selective ligands.

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    4. GABAA Receptor Subtypes
      Therapeutic Potential in Down Syndrome, Affective Disorders, Schizophrenia, and Autism
      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3997216/

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    5. That is an impressive artillery of links, Peter, I'll give them a read. If I recall it correctly the authors of my old paper dismissed GABA subunit modulation because the expression pattern of them didn't match the brain part they studied. Who knows...

      Are neurons immature in Schizophrenia?
      One could argue that they must have been mature at some point given that the majority of cognitive deficits in schizophrenia emerge in adolescence. On the other hand it might only be a play with words; if neurons work in reverse they mimic immature ones. Or maybe both NKCC1 and KCC2 are affected in birth-onset autism and only one of them is in later developing neuropathologies.

      This link from AJs conference comes to mind:

      Bumetanide rescue of phencyclidine-induced deficits in cognition, positive and negative symptoms in mice implicates NKCC1/KCC2-mediated changes in GABAA function in the pathophysiology and treatment of schizophrenia

      https://www.abstractsonline.com/pp8/?fbclid=IwAR0vK-NcctFVL_jamqEbPIPjeKtz3uPmLY3HB4enH9QCiCyXotVAP5pCH9w#!/7883/presentation/58314

      Unfortunately there are few trials of Bumetanide in human schizophrenia, I know of one case where it had beneficial effects, I think one Iranian RCT showed no effects and another one showed effect on positive symptoms like hallucinations.

      /Ling

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    6. Funnily it looks like one of the fenamates, niflumate, also acts as an antagonist on α6-containing GABA receptors.

      "Niflumate acts as a positive allosteric modulator on α1β2γ2 and as a negative modulator on α6β2 and α6β2γ2 (and α122) GABAA receptors. The noncompetitive antagonistic action of niflumate is mediated by the same site as the furosemide action, whereas the site for the positive allosteric modulator action depends on the presence of the γ2 subunit, but is different from the benzodiazepine binding site"

      https://www.researchgate.net/publication/5769560_The_aspirin_metabolite_salicylate_enhances_neuronal_excitation_in_rat_hippocampal_CA1_area_through_reducing_GABAergic_inhibition

      /Ling

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  8. Thank you for the post Peter! I had the idea to increased kcc2 activity with creatine, then made some research and finally came to your blog. I think It might not make a big change but it's a cheap and safe way to improve many conditions. I will add It to muy daughter's rutine.

    ReplyDelete

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