How can we manage progressive supranuclear palsy syndrome with pharmacotherapy?
Madia LozuponeVittorio DibelloAntonio DanieleVincenzo SolfrizziEmanuela RestaFrancesco PanzaPublished in: Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy (2024)
Pharmacological therapy for PSPS may interfere with the aggregation process or promote the clearance of abnormal tau aggregates. A variety of past and ongoing disease-modifying therapies targeting tau in PSPS included genetic, microtubule-stabilizing compounds, anti-phosphorylation, and acetylation agents, antiaggregant, protein removal, antioxidant neuronal and synaptic growth promotion therapies. New pharmacological gene-based approaches may open alternative prevention pathways for the deposition of abnormal tau in PSPS such as antisense oligonucleotide (ASO)-based drugs. Moreover, kinases and ubiquitin-proteasome systems could also be viable targets.
Keyphrases
- cerebrospinal fluid
- genome wide
- copy number
- multiple sclerosis
- minimally invasive
- small molecule
- smoking cessation
- protein protein
- cancer therapy
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- anti inflammatory
- cerebral ischemia
- amino acid
- transcription factor
- prefrontal cortex
- histone deacetylase
- brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- genome wide identification
- drug induced