This may just become my go to supplement for Parkinsons and dementia prevention along with massive amounts of coffee. What does your doctor say? ANYTHING AT ALL?
Apocynin, a Low Molecular Oral Treatment for Neurodegenerative Disease
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.
Abstract
Accumulating
evidence suggests that inflammatory mediators secreted by activated
resident or infiltrated innate immune cells have a significant impact on
the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. This may imply that
patients affected by a neurodegenerative disease may benefit from
treatment with selective inhibitors of innate immune activity. Here we
review the therapeutic potential of apocynin, an essentially nontoxic
phenolic compound isolated from the medicinal plant Jatropha multifida.
Apocynin is a selective inhibitor of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase Nox2
that can be applied orally and is remarkably effective at low dose.
1. Introduction
Ageing
societies are facing an increasing prevalence of neurodegenerative
diseases. Some relatively prevalent examples are Alzheimer's and
Parkinson's disease and less prevalent are Huntington's and Lou Gehrig's
disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; ALS). All neurodegenerative
diseases have in common that no effective treatment exists that can stop
the progressive deterioration of neurological functions. Of note, none
of the neuroprotective agents that have been tested in the clinic have
an efficacy that goes beyond symptoms control.
In
recent years the insight has been growing that inflammatory reactions
from resident or infiltrated innate immune cells may have a significant
impact on the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders [1].
A recognized central player is the microglia, a glial cell that belongs
to the myeloid lineage and is often indicated as the macrophage of the
CNS. This intriguing new insight may imply that drugs with proven
efficacy in the protection of peripheral organs against the cytotoxic
function of innate immune cells, such as mononuclear or
polymorphonuclear phagocytes (resp., MNCs and PMNs), might also be
useful for the treatment of the neuroinflammatory component of
neurodegenerative diseases. A major hurdle that drugs need to take is to
cross the blood brain barrier and penetrate the CNS parenchyma where
the neurodegenerative process takes place. In this review we will
discuss preclinical studies highlighting the potential of apocynin, a
small phenolic antioxidant, as treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.
2. Apocynin, a Pharmacologically Active Plant Phenol
Apocyin
(4′-hydroxy-3′-methoxyacetophenone or acetovanillone) was identified as
the biologically active substance in the roots of Picrorhiza kurroa
Royle ex Benth, a perennial plant growing in the alpine Himalaya.
Extracts from the roots are used in the Ayurvedic medical tradition of
India and Sri Lanka for the preparation of ethnic medicines for the
treatment of ailments of liver, heart, joints, and lungs. We have
prepared a 95% ethanolic root extract under controlled conditions in the
laboratory and subjected the preparation to an activity-guided
purification using the oxidative burst of human
polymorphonuclear/neutrophilic granulocytes (PMN) as an experimental
test for acute inflammation [2].
The
read-out assay we used was based on the generation of luminol-enhanced
chemiluminescence by human PMN stimulated with zymosan opsonized in
human serum. The essence of the assay is that the serum-opsonized yeast
particles stimulate the PMN via surface-exposed receptors of
immunoglobulins or complement factors. The activation signals relayed
via these receptors lead to the emptying of cytoplasmic granules
(degranulation) and the assembly of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase Nox2.
The Nox2 enzyme complex is assembled from membrane-bound (gp91phox, p22phox) and cytoplasmic (p40phox, p47phox, p67phox, and Rac2) subunits [3].
The assembly process involves phosphorylation of subunits by specific
kinases and formation of thiol-bridges. The assembled complex takes up
electrons from NADPH and transfers these onto free molecular oxygen
leading to formation of superoxide anion (O2
−; one electron reduction) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2;
two electron reduction). Both oxidants have cytotoxic activity as could
be shown using red blood cells from different species [4]. The oxidative burst of PMN comprises a cascade of strongly reactive oxygen species, collectively indicated as ROS (Figure 1). By reaction of O2
− with nitric oxide the strongly cytotoxic peroxynitrite is formed. In the presence of Fe2+ ions H2O2 is converted into highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (OH•),
which via peroxidation of membrane lipids affect the fluidity of cell
membranes. Myeloperoxidase released by degranulation of the PMN
catalyzes the reaction of H2O2 with halide molecules (Cl2, Br2, and J2) forming highly toxic hypohalides (OCl−, OBr−, and OJ−).
ROS are essential components of the intracellular killing of
phagocytosed microbes, but when released into the extracellular milieu
they are important mediators of the tissue destructive activity of
activated PMNs [5, 6].
It
can be envisaged that components of chemically complex plant extracts
can interfere with the read-out assay at multiple levels and may also
exert nonspecific effects such as killing of the PMN or scavenging of
the oxyradicals. This implies that successful activity-guided
purification needs to be well focused and carefully controlled for
nonspecific effects to avoid false positive results. Notwithstanding
these hurdles, we were able to demonstrate a highly specific activity of
apocynin in the assay. Apocynin was found to be metabolically activated
in an MPO-catalyzed reaction with H2O2 [7] forming a symmetrical dimer, diapocynin [8] (Figure 2).
The observation that the reaction intermediate could be trapped with
GSH led us to hypothesize that metabolically activated apocynin might
block the formation of thiol bridges between the membrane-bound and
cytosolic components that assemble functional Nox2. It was later found,
however, that diapocynin directly inhibits Nox2 superoxide production
and that this activity is independent of MPO [8].
An important finding with apocynin has been that it inhibits the
oxidative burst of PMNs, without impeding the intracellular killing of
bacteria. This implies that treatment with apocynin may prevent
collateral damage to tissues infiltrated by activated PMN without
impeding their bactericidal function.
3. Efficacy of Apocynin in AIMID Animal Models
The initial target disease in which we tested the clinical effect of apocynin was the WAG/Rij (RT-1u)
rat model of collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), which is an accepted
preclinical model of the autoimmune inflammatory disease (AIMID)
rheumatoid arthritis (RA). In this model, PMNs have a clear pathogenic
role [9], reflecting the situation in RA patients [6]. In the rat study we chose to administer apocynin at a dose range of 0,3 to 200 μg/mL drinking water, which was provided ad libitum. It was observed that already at the lowest dose of 0,3 μg/mL, corresponding to a daily oral dose of 6 μg, the arthritis was almost completely suppressed [10].
No effect of apocynin on serum levels of anti-collagen autoantibody or
of IL-6, an important pathogenic cytokine in CIA and RA, was observed,
suggesting high selectivity for the inflammatory component of the
disease. Independent from us, Hougee et al. demonstrated in a mouse CIA
model that orally administered apocynin restores the blocked production
of cartilage proteoglycan in the arthritic joint [11].
An intriguing side effect of the treatment, illustrating the powerful
anti-inflammatory effect of apocynin, was the dramatic suppression of
the necrotizing skin lesions at the sites where the immunizing
antigen/CFA formulation was injected [12].
Since
its initial identification as potent anti-inflammatory agent in 1990,
apocynin has become an established inhibitor of the oxidative burst in
neutrophils as demonstrated in a wide range of in vivo models
for immune-mediated inflammatory disorders affecting peripheral and
central organs. Of particular importance for this review are the
promising clinical effects observed in models of neurodegenerative
disease, including ALS, Alzheimer, and Parkinson's disease. In these
models the antioxidant activity of apocynin is not targeted to the
neutrophil but to the “macrophage of the brain,” that is, microglia.
4. Microglia
The
brain contains various cell types with the capacity to exert immune
functions including astrocytes, microglia cells, and macrophages located
in the meninges and perivascular spaces of brain arteries and
capillaries [13].
For their immune tasks these cells are equipped with conserved
receptors for pathogen-associated or damage-associated molecular
patterns, which relay activation signals to the cells for inducing
inflammatory effector mechanisms [14].
Microglia
are innate immune cells ubiquitously distributed within the central
nervous system where they are engaged in tight interactions with
neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes. However, only microglia
release MPO after stimulation, being a requisite for the metabolic
activation of apocynin.
Microglia in
the healthy CNS have a ramified resting phenotype. Opposite to earlier
concepts, microglia in the healthy brain are not resting but are highly
dynamic cells that carry out homeostatic surveillance of the
extracellular environment by the extension and retraction of their
protrusions and phagocytosis of tissue debris, which could otherwise
cause inflammation [15].
Activated microglia are found in diseased CNS tissue, such as within
demyelinated cortical grey matter lesions in the MS brain, surrounding
amyloid plaques in Alzheimer brain and in the degenerating substantia
nigra in Parkinson's disease [16, 17].
Although the diverse expression profiles of microglia appear to reflect
a broad, continuous spectrum of activation states, two activation
states at both ends of the spectrum can be recognized corresponding to
the M1 and M2 state designated for macrophages [18]. “Classically activated” M1 microglia, for example, induced by LPS or IFNγ, have proinflammatory functions which are exerted by the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, IL-1β,
and IL-12 and toxic substances such as reactive oxygen and nitrogen
species. “Alternatively activated” M2 microglia, such as induced in a
milieu containing high IL-4 or IL-13 levels, have anti-inflammatory and
tissue regenerative activities, which are mediated by cytokines such as
IL-4, IL-10, or TGF-β and repair factors such as insulin-like
growth factor, arginase-1, or chitinase-like-1. Not only the cytokine
milieu, but also the redox state of the microenvironment, which is
directly related to NADPH oxidase activity, determines the functional
differentiation of microglia towards an M1 or M2 phenotype [18].
5. Apocynin as a Potential Treatment of Neurodegenerative Disease
M1
microglia cells are the main resource of Nox2 in the brain. The
expression by M1 microglia of activated Nox2 producing ROS is an
essential component of microglia-mediated neurotoxicity. The broadly
accepted notion that microglia-derived ROS are important mediators of
neurodegenerative brain injury raises the question whether the favorable
pharmacological profile and low toxicity of apocynin can be used for
neuroprotective treatment. Microglia cells not only express Nox2 but
also secrete MPO after activation and could thus potentially exert
metabolic activation of apocynin. Several authors have reported on the
beneficial effect of apocynin on (models of) acute neurological
disorders, such as ischemia, intracerebral hemorrhage, and stroke
(reviewed in [19]). What are the perspectives for apocynin in chronic neurodegenerative disorders?
In vitro studies using cultured microglia have implicated
Nox2-derived ROS in the proliferation and functional polarization of
microglia [20, 21].
A crucial finding has been that inhibition of Nox2 promotes alternative
and anti-inflammatory microglia activation during neuroinflammation [22].
This implies that suppression of Nox2 with apocynin might restore a
healthy balance between a proinflammatory M1 and an
anti-inflammatory/proregenerative M2 phenotype of microglia. Others have
shown that apocynin lowers the production of IL-1β, TNF-α,
and nitric oxide by microglia, thus interrupting a self-perpetuating
cycle of detrimental activity. While the exact neurotoxic mechanism of
activated microglia in neurodegenerative disease is still uncertain, it
is also of considerable interest that the release of the excitotoxin
glutamate requires Nox2 activity and that this can be inhibited by
apocynin [23].
Taken together, these data suggest a potentially beneficial role of
apocynin in neurodegenerative disease. Indeed, promising effects of
apocynin have been observed in mouse models of some major
neurodegenerative diseases.
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, Lou Gehrig Disease).
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a common adult-onset neurodegenerative
disease affecting motor neurons. The disease leads to rapidly
progressing motoric impairment and death usually within 5 years. While
in the majority of patients the cause of the disease is unknown, in a
subset of cases the disease has a genetic cause, namely, mutations in
the superoxide dismutase-1 (SOD1) gene [24, 25]. The mutation enhances oxidative stress by dysregulated production of superoxide anion due to reduced dismutation to H2O2. Mutant SOD1 expressing astrocytes are linked to ALS pathology because of their reduced capacity to absorb glutamate [26] and/or by their release of neurotoxic factors [27]. Selective silencing of mutant SOD1 [28] or replacement of mutant by wild-type microglia [29]
in the mutant SOD1 mouse model strongly point to a central pathogenic
role of microglia. Harraz et al. have used oral apocynin to control
progression of neurodegeneration in a SOD1 mutant mouse model and
observed promising effects [30];
it was observed that administration of apocynin in the drinking water
significantly prolonged survival and delayed the onset of motoric
defects. This study shows that orally administered apocynin can build up
a sufficiently high concentration within the CNS parenchyma for
mitigating neurotoxic levels of ROS production. However, these promising
data could not be reproduced in another study using the same mutant
mouse strain [31].
Alzheimer Disease (AD). Alzheimer disease is an
ageing-associated progressive neurological disorder leading to
irreversible dementia. Neuropathological hallmarks of AD are senile
plaques of misfolded and fibrillar amyloid-β aggregates and intraneuronal tangles of tau protein within the cerebral cortex [32]. Activated microglia cells were found clustered around senile plaques producing neurotoxic agents like ROS, NO, and TNF-α. Activation of microglia Nox2 by oligomeric and/or fibrillar amyloid-β [33, 34] and expression of activated Nox2 in Alzheimer brain [35] have been reported.
Lull et al. have tested apocynin at a daily oral dose of 10 mg/kg via the drinking water in a hAPP(751)SL transgenic mouse model of AD [36].
They observed in apocynin-treated mice a significant reduction of
plaque size within cortex and hippocampus and a reduction of microglia
numbers in the cortex, but not in the hippocampus. However, a behavioral
feature of AD observed in this mouse model, that is, performance in the
Morris water maze swim test, which tests spatial memory organized in
the hippocampus, was not markedly improved by the treatment. The limited
clinical effect of apocynin in the model might be due to the absence of
clear neuroinflammation, while this is more prominent in AD patients,
and because of the fact that plaque formation does not necessarily
predict cognitive decline.
Parkinson's Disease (PD). The pathological hallmark of
PD is a progressive degeneration of dopamine producing neurons in the
substantia nigra (SN), a pigmented structure located in the bottom of
the midbrain. Via the release of dopamine, the SN has a central role in
the coordination of various neurological functions, including reward,
addiction, and movement. The latter function is particularly disturbed
in PD. To compensate for dopamine loss, a metabolically stable precursor
of dopamine (L-DOPA) is given, which in a substantial number of
patients causes typical involuntary movements known as hyperkinetic
syndrome. While in the vast majority of (sporadic) PD patients the cause
of the disease is not known, in a small fraction a genetic cause has
been found, namely, mutations in several genes, including
alpha-synuclein, parkin, leucine-rich repeat kinase 2, PTEN-induced
putative kinase 1, and ATP13A2 [25]. The observation that users of heroin contaminated with MPTP developed PD symptoms [37]
enabled generation of a clinically relevant animal PD model. After
conversion of MPTP into MPP+ by monoamine oxidase B in astrocytes, MPP+
is concentrated in dopaminergic cells via uptake through the specific
dopamine transporter, where it blocks complex I of the mitochondrial
respiratory chain. The ensuing redox stress causes amongst others
dysregulation of cellular Ca2+ leading to cell death. Just
like in ALS and AD, neurodegeneration in PD is found to be associated
with microglia Nox2 activation, which is thought to contribute
significantly to the pathogenic process [38].
6. The Effect of Apocynin in a Nonhuman Primate Parkinson's Disease Model
Repetitive
injection of a low dose of MPTP in common marmosets, a small-bodied
neotropical primate, elicits a neurological disease that at the level of
clinical and neuropathological presentation closely approximates PD [41]. We have used this MPTP model in 5 marmoset twins to test whether oral apocynin is also effective in a higher species [35].
For oral administration, apocynin was dissolved in Arabic gum; one
sibling of each twin was given apocynin containing gum and the other was
given only the gum. Treatment with apocynin (100 mg/kg, TID) started
one week before PD induction with MPTP (1 mg/kg, via subcutaneous
injection for 8 days). Apocynin limited the typical body weight loss
associated with the parkinsonian syndrome. Also the motor function in
the apocynin treated monkeys was improved, indicating an anti-Parkinson
efficacy of apocynin. Moreover, the number of surviving dopamine neurons
was increased by apocynin, indicating a neuroprotective efficacy.
Remarkably, apocynin has a similar molecular structure as homovanillic
acid (HVA), a metabolite of dopamine. An explanation of the protective
efficacy of apocynin in PD might also be related to the compensation of
the reduced level of the natural available o-methoxycatechol HVA.
7. Perspective for Treatment of Human Patients
Apocynin
is a potentially attractive oral prodrug because of its low general
toxicity and the fact that its specific antioxidant action is elicited
after metabolic activation by MPO releasing phagocytic cells. Safety
data of apocynin are scarce, but those available show low toxicity and
high stability (partly reviewed in [19]).
The LD50 after oral dosing in mice has been estimated at 9 g/kg. In
rats about 80% of intraperitoneally injected apocynin at 120 mg/kg was
recovered in unchanged form in a urine sample collected 20 hours later.
An intravenous dose of 420 mg/kg apocynin in mice caused minimal signs
of toxicity [12].
To
our knowledge, apocynin has not been tested in human neurodegenerative
disease patients. However, Peters et al. have evaluated the therapeutic
potential of inhaled apocynin on ozone-induced bronchial
hyperresponsiveness to methacholine in asthmatic patients as a model of
inflammatory lung disease [42].
The authors could exclude scavenging of ozone by apocynin and concluded
that the effect was mitigating ROS production by PMNs and eosinophils
that had infiltrated the lung upon ozone exposure.
The
mouse studies discussed in this review show that low doses of apocynin
administered via the oral route reach the CNS parenchyma in a sufficient
concentration to inhibit the microglia oxidative burst and inhibit
neurodegeneration. Taking the very low systemic toxicity and the highly
specific mode of action of apocynin into account it would be an
attractive perspective to test the therapeutic value in human
neurodegenerative disease.
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