Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology (Aug 2022)
Guanabenz ameliorates disease in vanishing white matter mice in contrast to sephin1
Abstract
Abstract Objective Vanishing white matter (VWM) is a leukodystrophy, characterized by stress‐sensitive neurological deterioration and premature death. It is currently without curative treatment. It is caused by bi‐allelic pathogenic variants in the genes encoding eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B). eIF2B is essential for the regulation of the integrated stress response (ISR), a physiological response to cellular stress. Preclinical studies on VWM mouse models revealed that deregulated ISR is key in the pathophysiology of VWM and an effective treatment target. Guanabenz, an α2‐adrenergic agonist, attenuates the ISR and has beneficial effects on VWM neuropathology. The current study aimed at elucidating guanabenz's disease‐modifying potential and mechanism of action in VWM mice. Sephin1, an ISR‐modulating guanabenz analog without α2‐adrenergic agonistic properties, was included to separate effects on the ISR from α2‐adrenergic effects. Methods Wild‐type and VWM mice were subjected to placebo, guanabenz or sephin1 treatments. Effects on clinical signs, neuropathology, and ISR deregulation were determined. Guanabenz's and sephin1's ISR‐modifying effects were tested in cultured cells that expressed or lacked the α2‐adrenergic receptor. Results Guanabenz improved clinical signs, neuropathological hallmarks, and ISR regulation in VWM mice, but sephin1 did not. Guanabenz's effects on the ISR in VWM mice were not replicated in cell cultures and the contribution of α2‐adrenergic effects on the deregulated ISR could therefore not be assessed. Interpretation Guanabenz proved itself as a viable treatment option for VWM. The exact mechanism through which guanabenz exerts its ameliorating impact on VWM requires further studies. Sephin1 is not simply a guanabenz replacement without α2‐adrenergic effects.