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Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon

Genodermatoses are rare inherited skin diseases that frequently affect other organs. They often have marked effects on wellbeing and may cause early death. Progress in molecular genetics and translational research has unravelled many underlying pathological mechanisms, and in several disorders with...

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Autores principales: Morren, Marie-Anne, Legius, Eric, Giuliano, Fabienne, Hadj-Rabia, Smail, Hohl, Daniel, Bodemer, Christine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8766835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35069188
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.746664
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author Morren, Marie-Anne
Legius, Eric
Giuliano, Fabienne
Hadj-Rabia, Smail
Hohl, Daniel
Bodemer, Christine
author_facet Morren, Marie-Anne
Legius, Eric
Giuliano, Fabienne
Hadj-Rabia, Smail
Hohl, Daniel
Bodemer, Christine
author_sort Morren, Marie-Anne
collection PubMed
description Genodermatoses are rare inherited skin diseases that frequently affect other organs. They often have marked effects on wellbeing and may cause early death. Progress in molecular genetics and translational research has unravelled many underlying pathological mechanisms, and in several disorders with high unmet need, has opened the way for the introduction of innovative treatments. One approach is to intervene where cell-signaling pathways are dysregulated, in the case of overactive pathways by the use of selective inhibitors, or when the activity of an essential factor is decreased by augmenting a molecular component to correct disequilibrium in the pathway. Where inflammatory reactions have been induced by a genetically altered protein, another possible approach is to suppress the inflammation directly. Depending on the nature of the genodermatosis, the implicated protein or even on the particular mutation, to correct the consequences or the genetic defect, may require a highly personalised stratagem. Repurposed drugs, can be used to bring about a “read through” strategy especially where the genetic defect induces premature termination codons. Sometimes the defective protein can be replaced by a normal functioning one. Cell therapies with allogeneic normal keratinocytes or fibroblasts may restore the integrity of diseased skin and allogeneic bone marrow or mesenchymal cells may additionally rescue other affected organs. Genetic engineering is expanding rapidly. The insertion of a normal functioning gene into cells of the recipient is since long explored. More recently, genome editing, allows reframing, insertion or deletion of exons or disruption of aberrantly functioning genes. There are now several examples where these stratagems are being explored in the (pre)clinical phase of therapeutic trial programmes. Another stratagem, designed to reduce the severity of a given disease involves the use of RNAi to attenuate expression of a harmful protein by decreasing abundance of the cognate transcript. Most of these strategies are short-lasting and will thus require intermittent life-long administration. In contrast, insertion of healthy copies of the relevant gene or editing the disease locus in the genome to correct harmful mutations in stem cells is more likely to induce a permanent cure. Here we discuss the potential advantages and drawbacks of applying these technologies in patients with these genetic conditions. Given the severity of many genodermatoses, prevention of transmission to future generations remains an important goal including offering reproductive choices, such as preimplantation genetic testing, which can allow selection of an unaffected embryo for transfer to the uterus.
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spelling pubmed-87668352022-01-20 Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon Morren, Marie-Anne Legius, Eric Giuliano, Fabienne Hadj-Rabia, Smail Hohl, Daniel Bodemer, Christine Front Pharmacol Pharmacology Genodermatoses are rare inherited skin diseases that frequently affect other organs. They often have marked effects on wellbeing and may cause early death. Progress in molecular genetics and translational research has unravelled many underlying pathological mechanisms, and in several disorders with high unmet need, has opened the way for the introduction of innovative treatments. One approach is to intervene where cell-signaling pathways are dysregulated, in the case of overactive pathways by the use of selective inhibitors, or when the activity of an essential factor is decreased by augmenting a molecular component to correct disequilibrium in the pathway. Where inflammatory reactions have been induced by a genetically altered protein, another possible approach is to suppress the inflammation directly. Depending on the nature of the genodermatosis, the implicated protein or even on the particular mutation, to correct the consequences or the genetic defect, may require a highly personalised stratagem. Repurposed drugs, can be used to bring about a “read through” strategy especially where the genetic defect induces premature termination codons. Sometimes the defective protein can be replaced by a normal functioning one. Cell therapies with allogeneic normal keratinocytes or fibroblasts may restore the integrity of diseased skin and allogeneic bone marrow or mesenchymal cells may additionally rescue other affected organs. Genetic engineering is expanding rapidly. The insertion of a normal functioning gene into cells of the recipient is since long explored. More recently, genome editing, allows reframing, insertion or deletion of exons or disruption of aberrantly functioning genes. There are now several examples where these stratagems are being explored in the (pre)clinical phase of therapeutic trial programmes. Another stratagem, designed to reduce the severity of a given disease involves the use of RNAi to attenuate expression of a harmful protein by decreasing abundance of the cognate transcript. Most of these strategies are short-lasting and will thus require intermittent life-long administration. In contrast, insertion of healthy copies of the relevant gene or editing the disease locus in the genome to correct harmful mutations in stem cells is more likely to induce a permanent cure. Here we discuss the potential advantages and drawbacks of applying these technologies in patients with these genetic conditions. Given the severity of many genodermatoses, prevention of transmission to future generations remains an important goal including offering reproductive choices, such as preimplantation genetic testing, which can allow selection of an unaffected embryo for transfer to the uterus. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8766835/ /pubmed/35069188 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.746664 Text en Copyright © 2022 Morren, Legius, Giuliano, Hadj-Rabia, Hohl and Bodemer. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Pharmacology
Morren, Marie-Anne
Legius, Eric
Giuliano, Fabienne
Hadj-Rabia, Smail
Hohl, Daniel
Bodemer, Christine
Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title_full Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title_fullStr Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title_full_unstemmed Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title_short Challenges in Treating Genodermatoses: New Therapies at the Horizon
title_sort challenges in treating genodermatoses: new therapies at the horizon
topic Pharmacology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8766835/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35069188
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2021.746664
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