The contribution of mouse models in the rare disease alkaptonuria

Publication date: Available online 5 December 2019Source: Drug Discovery Today: Disease ModelsAuthor(s): Juliette H. Hughes, George Bou-Gharios, Lakshminarayan R. Ranganath, James A. GallagherAlkaptonuria is an ultra-rare autosomal recessive disorder of tyrosine metabolism, whereby the homogentisate 1,2-dioxygenase (HGD) enzyme is deficient, causing an elevation of its substrate homogentisic acid (HGA). Overtime, elevated HGA causes connective tissue ochronosis, leading to a severe and early onset osteoarthropathy. The use of HGD deficient mouse models in this metabolic bone disease have provided the opportunity to investigate AKU pathophysiology and potential treatments. An ENU mutagenesis AKU mouse model (BALB/c Hgd−/−) provided the means to explore the onset of pigmentation in cartilage and treatment of AKU with nitisinone, an inhibitor of the upstream enzyme forming HGA. This work provided evidence that nitisinone could not only lower circulating HGA, but could also prevent ochronosis and halt disease progression, leading to its off-label use at the National Alkaptonuria Centre (Liverpool, UK) and its subsequent testing in human clinical trials (DevelopAKUre). Recently, a new targeted AKU mouse model (Hgd tm1a−/−, C57BL/6) has been established, offering a LacZ reporter gene for localising gene expression and LoxP and FRT sites that enabled generation of an inducible and liver-specific HGD knockout model (Hgd tm1d MxCre+/−). This conditional model determined the ...
Source: Drug Discovery Today: Disease Models - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research