A Potent Antagonist of Smoothened in Hedgehog Signaling for Epilepsy

Epilepsy is one of the common encephalopathies caused by sudden abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain. About 30% of patients with epilepsy are insensitive and refractory to existing antiseizure medications. The sonic hedgehog signaling pathway is essential to the development and homeostasis of...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2022-11, Vol.23 (23), p.14505
Hauptverfasser: Fan, Junwan, Zhao, Zichen, Liu, Ru, Li, Haowen, He, Wenyan, Wu, Jianping, Wang, Yongjun, Chen, Wei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Epilepsy is one of the common encephalopathies caused by sudden abnormal discharges of neurons in the brain. About 30% of patients with epilepsy are insensitive and refractory to existing antiseizure medications. The sonic hedgehog signaling pathway is essential to the development and homeostasis of brain. Aberrant sonic hedgehog signaling is increased in refractory epileptic lesions and may involve the etiology of epilepsy. Thus, new inhibitors of Smoothened, a key signal transducer of this signaling pathway are urgently need for refractory epilepsy. We have established a high-throughput screening platform and discovered several active small molecules targeting Smoothened including TT22. Here we show that the novel Smoothened inhibitor TT22 could block the translocation of βarrestin2-GFP to Smoothened, reduce the accumulation of Smoothened on primary cilia, displace Bodipy-cyclopamine binding to Smoothened, and inhibit the expression of downstream Gli transcription factor. Moreover, TT22 inhibits the abnormal seizure-like activity in neurons. Furthermore, we demonstrated that FDA-approved Smoothened inhibitor GDC-0449 and LDE-225 are able to inhibit abnormal seizure-like activity in neurons. Thus, our study suggests that targeting the sonic hedgehog signaling with new small-molecule Smoothened inhibitors might provide a potential new therapeutic avenue for refractory epilepsy.
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms232314505