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Genetic ablation of acid ceramidase in Krabbe disease confirms the psychosine hypothesis and identifies a new therapeutic target.

Citation
Li, Y., et al. “Genetic Ablation Of Acid Ceramidase In Krabbe Disease Confirms The Psychosine Hypothesis And Identifies A New Therapeutic Target.”. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, pp. 20097-20103.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Yedda Li, Yue Xu, Bruno A Benitez, Murtaza S Nagree, Joshua T Dearborn, Xuntian Jiang, Miguel A Guzman, Josh C Woloszynek, Alex Giaramita, Bryan K Yip, Joseph Elsbernd, Michael C Babcock, Melanie Lo, Stephen C Fowler, David F Wozniak, Carole A Vogler, Jeffrey A Medin, Brett E Crawford, Mark S Sands
Keywords Krabbe disease, acid ceramidase, galactosylceramidase, psychosine, twitcher mouse
Abstract

Infantile globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD, Krabbe disease) is a fatal demyelinating disorder caused by a deficiency in the lysosomal enzyme galactosylceramidase (GALC). GALC deficiency leads to the accumulation of the cytotoxic glycolipid, galactosylsphingosine (psychosine). Complementary evidence suggested that psychosine is synthesized via an anabolic pathway. Here, we show instead that psychosine is generated catabolically through the deacylation of galactosylceramide by acid ceramidase (ACDase). This reaction uncouples GALC deficiency from psychosine accumulation, allowing us to test the long-standing "psychosine hypothesis." We demonstrate that genetic loss of ACDase activity (Farber disease) in the GALC-deficient mouse model of human GLD (twitcher) eliminates psychosine accumulation and cures GLD. These data suggest that ACDase could be a target for substrate reduction therapy (SRT) in Krabbe patients. We show that pharmacological inhibition of ACDase activity with carmofur significantly decreases psychosine accumulation in cells from a Krabbe patient and prolongs the life span of the twitcher (Twi) mouse. Previous SRT experiments in the Twi mouse utilized l-cycloserine, which inhibits an enzyme several steps upstream of psychosine synthesis, thus altering the balance of other important lipids. Drugs that directly inhibit ACDase may have a more acceptable safety profile due to their mechanistic proximity to psychosine biogenesis. In total, these data clarify our understanding of psychosine synthesis, confirm the long-held psychosine hypothesis, and provide the impetus to discover safe and effective inhibitors of ACDase to treat Krabbe disease.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume
116
Issue
40
Number of Pages
20097-20103
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1091-6490
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1912108116
Alternate Journal
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
PMID
31527255
PMCID
PMC6778236
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