The drug is rapamycin, also called sirolimus, and is currently used as an immunosuppressant, to help prevent rejection of a new, transplanted kidney.

Over 600,000 people in the U.S., and 12 million worldwide, are affected by the inherited kidney disease known as ADPKD, short for autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease. In the U.S., the number of individuals affected by ADPKD is greater than the number affected by cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, hemophilia, Down's syndrome, and sickle cell anemia combined. The disease is characterized by the proliferation of cysts that eventually debilitate the kidney, causing kidney failure in half of all patients by the time they reach age 50.

Currently no treatment exists to prevent or slow cyst formation, and most ADPKD patients require kidney transplants or life-long dialysis for survival, explained Thomas Weimbs, director of the laboratory where the discovery was made. Weimbs is assistant professor in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology at UCSB.

The scientists studied the effects of rapamycin on mice. "When we administered rapamycin to mice with PKD and looked at their kidneys afterwards, we were absolutely amazed," said Weimbs. "The kidneys were smaller, had smaller cysts and had retained their function."

"We have known the genetic mutations that cause PKD for over a decade," explained Weimbs. "The genetic mutations are located in the gene for the polycystin-1 protein. Unfortunately, the function of polycystin-1 has remained poorly understood, which has made it difficult to devise a treatment strategy for this disease."

Weimbs and his research team found that polycystin-1 controls an important regulatory protein called mTOR. A defect in polycystin-1 leads to over-activation of mTOR. This, in turn, causes excess growth and proliferation of kidney cells, which results in the formation of thousands of cysts that eventually destroy the kidney.

Fortunately, a highly effective inhibitor of mTOR is well known. This drug, rapamycin, was originally discovered in the 1970s in soil from Easter Island. It is used for immunosuppression in kidney transplant patients to prevent rejection of the new kidney.

Weimbs and his colleagues wondered about treating kidney patients with rapamycin. Most kidney transplant patients keep their diseased kidneys in place and the transplanted kidney is an additional, third kidney. So his colleagues, David A. Goldfarb and Andrew Novick, at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, suggested studying transplant patients who had received rapamycin to help their bodies accept the new kidney.

The research team identified a group of four rapamycin-treated patients and found that their polycystic kidneys shrank in size by 25% over two years. The polycystic kidneys in a control group showed no change.

"Even though we only had a very small number of patients, this result is highly encouraging because it points in the right direction," said Weimbs.

It shows, for the first time, a connection between polycystin-1 and mTOR, and strongly suggests that rapamycin may be a promising drug for treating PKD, explained Weimbs. "The fact that rapamycin is already clinically approved for other uses will facilitate future clinical trials of the drug."

Co-authors on the paper with Weimbs are: Jonathan M. Shillingford and Seng Hui Low in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at UCSB; Claire H. Larson at the Department of Cell Biology, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland Ohio; Ryan Hedgepeth, Andrew C. Novick, and David A. Goldfarb at the Glickman Urological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; Noel S. Murcia and Nicole Brown at the Department of Pediatrics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio; Chris A. Flask at the Department of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio; Albrecht Kramer-Zucker and Gerd Walz at the Department of Medicine, Nephrology, University Hospital Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; Klaus B. Piontek and Gregory G. Germino at the Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md.

ucsb

Tag Cloud

Accutane kaufen Ohne Rezept
Aciphex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Actos kaufen Ohne Rezept
Aldactone kaufen Ohne Rezept
Allegra kaufen Ohne Rezept
Amoxicillin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Antabuse kaufen Ohne Rezept
Arcoxia kaufen Ohne Rezept
Atrovent kaufen Ohne Rezept
Bactrim kaufen Ohne Rezept
Benicar kaufen Ohne Rezept
Biaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Buspar kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cardura kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cipro kaufen Ohne Rezept
Cleocin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Clonidine kaufen Ohne Rezept
Coreg kaufen Ohne Rezept
Crestor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Differin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Effexor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Elavil kaufen Ohne Rezept
Erythromycin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Evista kaufen Ohne Rezept
Femara kaufen Ohne Rezept
Flagyl kaufen Ohne Rezept
Fosamax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Glucophage kaufen Ohne Rezept
Hydrochlorothiazide kaufen Ohne Rezept
Imitrex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Inderal kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lamisil kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lasix kaufen Ohne Rezept
Levaquin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Lotensin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Maxalt kaufen Ohne Rezept
Micardis kaufen Ohne Rezept
Misoprostol kaufen Ohne Rezept
Naltrexone kaufen Ohne Rezept
Nexium kaufen Ohne Rezept
Nolvadex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Norvasc kaufen Ohne Rezept
Ortho Tri-Cyclen kaufen Ohne Rezept
Parlodel kaufen Ohne Rezept
Plavix kaufen Ohne Rezept
Premarin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Priligy kaufen Ohne Rezept
Propecia kaufen Ohne Rezept
Retin-A kaufen Ohne Rezept
Robaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Skelaxin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Suprax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Synthroid kaufen Ohne Rezept
Trileptal kaufen Ohne Rezept
Valtrex kaufen Ohne Rezept
Ventolin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Xenical kaufen Ohne Rezept
Yasmin kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zithromax kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zocor kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zyban kaufen Ohne Rezept
Zyvox kaufen Ohne Rezept