PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Modulation of KDM1A with vafidemstat rescues memory deficit and behavioral alterations.

  • Tamara Maes,
  • Cristina Mascaró,
  • David Rotllant,
  • Michele Matteo Pio Lufino,
  • Angels Estiarte,
  • Nathalie Guibourt,
  • Fernando Cavalcanti,
  • Christian Griñan-Ferré,
  • Mercè Pallàs,
  • Roser Nadal,
  • Antonio Armario,
  • Isidro Ferrer,
  • Alberto Ortega,
  • Nuria Valls,
  • Matthew Fyfe,
  • Marc Martinell,
  • Julio César Castro Palomino,
  • Carlos Buesa Arjol

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233468
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
p. e0233468

Abstract

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Transcription disequilibria are characteristic of many neurodegenerative diseases. The activity-evoked transcription of immediate early genes (IEGs), important for neuronal plasticity, memory and behavior, is altered in CNS diseases and governed by epigenetic modulation. KDM1A, a histone 3 lysine 4 demethylase that forms part of transcription regulation complexes, has been implicated in the control of IEG transcription. Here we report the development of vafidemstat (ORY-2001), a brain penetrant inhibitor of KDM1A and MAOB. ORY-2001 efficiently inhibits brain KDM1A at doses suitable for long term treatment, and corrects memory deficit as assessed in the novel object recognition testing in the Senescence Accelerated Mouse Prone 8 (SAMP8) model for accelerated aging and Alzheimer's disease. Comparison with a selective KDM1A or MAOB inhibitor reveals that KDM1A inhibition is key for efficacy. ORY-2001 further corrects behavior alterations including aggression and social interaction deficits in SAMP8 mice and social avoidance in the rat rearing isolation model. ORY-2001 increases the responsiveness of IEGs, induces genes required for cognitive function and reduces a neuroinflammatory signature in SAMP8 mice. Multiple genes modulated by ORY-2001 are differentially expressed in Late Onset Alzheimer's Disease. Most strikingly, the amplifier of inflammation S100A9 is highly expressed in LOAD and in the hippocampus of SAMP8 mice, and down-regulated by ORY-2001. ORY-2001 is currently in multiple Phase IIa studies.