Researchers develop potential treatment for fatal kidney disease

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Researchers developfatal kidney disease-Indian Bureaucracy
Researchers developfatal kidney disease-Indian Bureaucracy

Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center, working with a California biotech firm, have developed a potential drug to treat polycystic kidney disease — an incurable genetic disease that often leads to end-stage kidney failure.

The drug, now called RGLS4326, is in preclinical animal testing at San Diego-based Regulus Therapeutics Inc. An investigational new drug filing to pave the way for human clinical trials is expected later this year, said Dr. Vishal Patel, Assistant Professor of Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern.

Dr. Patel is senior author of a study describing research that led to the drug’s development, published online in Nature Communications.

Affecting about 600,000 people in the U.S., autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) causes numerous fluid-filled cysts to form in the kidney. An affected kidney, normally the size of a human fist, sometimes grows as large as a football. As their numbers and sizes increase, these cysts eventually interfere with the kidney’s ability to filter blood and remove bodily waste. The cysts can quietly grow for decades until symptoms appear such as blood in the urine, Dr. Patel said. About half of those affected with ADPKD suffer kidney failure by age 60, according to the National Kidney Foundation.

“There isn’t a single drug on the U.S. market right now to treat the disease,” Dr. Patel said. “Once your kidneys fail, your only option for survival is to get a transplant or start dialysis.”

In 2009, Dr. Patel began searching for microRNAs that might underlie progression of ADPKD. MicroRNAs — or MiRs for short — are tiny RNA fragments that interfere with normal gene expression.

Proof that such RNA fragments even existed came in the early 1990s; their presence in humans was first reported in 2000. Those discoveries led to a groundswell of interest in developing drugs to treat diseases caused by microRNAs, Dr. Patel said — in part because the process can be straightforward once the problem-causing fragment is identified.

“Because miRs are so small, drugs can easily be designed against them. And since we know the nucleotide sequence of every known microRNA, all that is required is to prepare an anti-miR with a sequence that is exactly the opposite of the miR’s,” he said.

In this study, researchers in Dr. Patel’s lab focused on microRNA cluster 17~92 following identification of potential miR targets. A National Institutes of Health grant funded the UTSW research. In 2013, Dr. Patel and fellow researchers reported in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that this microRNA cluster indeed appeared to promote kidney cyst growth.

Using four mouse models, the researchers next studied whether inhibiting this microRNA could slow cyst growth and thus delay ADPKD progression. They found that genetically deleting microRNA-17~92 slowed cyst growth and more than doubled the life spans of some mice tested.

Based on that finding, Dr. Patel’s lab collaborated with Regulus Therapeutics to test an anti-microRNA-17 drug. The test drug slowed the growth of kidney cysts in two mouse models and in cell cultures of human kidney cysts, the study showed.

In the Nature Communications study, UTSW researchers also reported how miR-17 causes cyst proliferation: the molecule essentially reprograms the metabolism of kidney cells so that cellular structures called mitochondria use less nutrients, freeing up resources to instead make cell parts that become cysts. MiR-17 accomplishes this by repressing a protein involved in making RNA called peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha, the researchers found.

More:Science

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Saurabh
Saurabh Sinha, Editor of IndianBureaucracy.com, is known for his credible, precise and insightful coverage of governance, civil services and administrative developments in India. Under his leadership, the portal has grown into a trusted national platform for accurate updates, appointments and policy movements within the bureaucratic ecosystem. Saurabh’s strong professional networking and deep understanding of government functioning enable him to present timely, reliable and well-contextualised information to readers across sectors. As a thought-driven editor, he promotes informed dialogue on governance reforms while maintaining high editorial standards. His calm, consistent and detail-oriented approach continues to strengthen the portal’s reputation. इंडियनब्यूरोक्रेसी.कॉम के संपादक सौरभ सिन्हा देश की नौकरशाही, शासन व्यवस्था और प्रशासनिक गतिविधियों की विश्वसनीय तथा संतुलित रिपोर्टिंग के लिए जाने जाते हैं। उनके नेतृत्व में यह पोर्टल नियुक्तियों, नीतिगत बदलावों और प्रशासनिक खबरों का एक भरोसेमंद राष्ट्रीय स्रोत बन चुका है। शासन तंत्र की गहरी समझ और मजबूत पेशेवर नेटवर्क के कारण सौरभ पाठकों को समयबद्ध, सटीक और संदर्भित जानकारी प्रदान करते हैं। एक विचारशील संपादक के रूप में वे सुशासन, पारदर्शिता और सुधारों पर सकारात्मक संवाद को बढ़ावा देते हैं। उनकी शांत, सूक्ष्म और पेशेवर संपादकीय शैली पोर्टल की प्रतिष्ठा को लगातार मजबूत कर रही है।