“We were surprised to see plants completely happy and healthy, even though they were genetically producing the toxic human protein,” said CECAD researcher David Vilchez, who usually works with cell cultures and nematodes as model organisms. The next step was to find out precisely how plants manage to avoid the toxic aggregation of mutated huntingtin. As it turned out, the key lay in the chloroplasts, the plant-specific organelles that carry out photosynthesis and obtain energy from light. Llamas said: “Unlike humans, plants have an extracellular type of organelle available, the chloroplasts, which apparently provides an extended molecular machinery to get rid of toxic protein aggregates.” The multidisciplinary team then identified the chloroplast plant enzyme Stromal Processing Peptidase (SPP) as the decisive protective mechanism that safeguards the plants against the problematic human protein.
Start-up planned
The team then introduced synthetically produced SPP (or the corresponding gene for it) into animal model organisms. And indeed: the plant SPP reduced protein clumps and symptoms in Huntington’s disease models, for example in cultured human cells and worms like the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Dr Hyun Ju Lee, a postdoc involved in the research, said: “We were pleased to observe that expression of the plant SPP protein improved motility of C. elegans worms affected by Huntingtin even at later aging stages, when the symptoms are even worse.” The results thus open the door to testing SPP as a potential therapy for Huntington’s disease.
Dr Seda Koyuncu, another postdoc involved in the study, added: “Over the past years, we have seen several promising approaches to treating hereditary diseases like Huntington’s fail. We are confident that our plant synthetic approach will lead to significant advances in the field.” This hope has now earned the team funding under the GO-Bio initial programme of the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF). According to Llamas, the plan is to found a start-up for the production of plant proteins in order to test them as potential therapeutics for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases in humans.
It is still early to say whether or not plant chloroplasts actually hold the key to successfully treating Huntington’s and other polyglutamine diseases. So far, the researchers also cannot assess what side effects the plant enzyme might have in humans. Many of the therapies tested so far have failed precisely because of this. In the last two years, for example, two global companies (Novartis and Roche) gave up on their originally promising Huntington’s clinical trials because of serious side effects. But this completely new mechanism certainly represents a glimmer of hope.
Ernesto Llamas puts it this way: “We usually forget that some plants can live for thousands of years and should urgently be studied as models for ageing research.” With their collaboration between aging research, including neurodegeneration, and plant science, the researcher team are real trend-setters: a whole series of research projects all over the world are starting to pursue similar approaches.
Further Information:
CECAD Cluster of Excellence in Aging Research
Website Prof. Dr. David Vilchez
Read paper on Nature Aging