Grants and Contracts Details
Description
For largely unknown reasons, aging is accompanied by progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, strength,
function, and regenerative capacity.1 By the time US adults reach 60 years of age, 30% will suffer from sarcopenia,
characterized by clinically recognizable chronic muscle degeneration manifesting as extreme fatigue,
weakness, and greatly reduced physical activity. This condition typically progresses to highly debilitating
frailty syndrome. Treating this age-associated chronic disease is critical to avoid significant decreases in the
quality of life among older adults. An estimated 15M US adults suffer with sarcopenia, and this chronic disease
will become increasingly pervasive and an ever greater healthcare problem as the number of older Americans
steadily increase over the next 30 years. Given the scope and impact of this chronic disease, there is a clear
unmet need for drugs that slow, stop, or reverse sarcopenia and thus significantly improve the quality of life for
aging Americans with deteriorating muscle function. Although the etiology of sarcopenia is not well understood,
current research suggests that a critical deter- minant of sarcopenia is muscle stem cell (muSC) senescence.
A working mechanism for the development of muSC senescence is as follows: as muscle cells age, they
progressively develop increased expression and/or activity of nicotinamide N-methyltransferase (NNMT), which
results in lowered intracellular NAD+ levels, re- duced SIRT1 activity, increased premature differentiation of
muSCs, and elevated muSC senescence that ul- timately interferes with muSC-mediated muscle growth and
homeostasis. Recently, we developed small molecules that selectively inhibit NNMT, activate the NAD salvage
pathway, and increase intracellular levels of NAD+. Our lead series of NNMT inhibitors have excellent
physicochemical properties (e.g., high solubility, stability, permeability), high selectivity, clean off-target
pharmacological profile, promising pharmacokinetic profile (e.g., high oral bioavailability, 20-hr half-life), and no
apparent signs of early toxicity/adverse indications. Our preliminary in vivo studies have demonstrated that
NNMT inhibitors can increase muSC activity and re- generative capacity, enhance muscle fiber growth, and
improve muscle mitochondrial respiratory capacity and function in aged mice. Based on these promising
results we hypothesize that small molecule NNMT inhibi- tors can safely normalize defects in aged muscle
pathophysiology and mitigate/reverse sarcopenia. This hypothesis will be tested using translationally-relevant
in vivo models for muscle regeneration, repair, and function and in vitro and in vivo models for drug safety.
Upon successful completion of this project, a drug can- didate will be identified that could advance to INDdirected
preclinical studies. The assembled project team has extensive expertise ranging from drug
development to in vivo muscle function assessment, and is eminently qualified to perform the described
studies and successfully complete this project.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/1/19 → 1/31/21 |
Funding
- University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston: $38,302.00
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