Limb girdle muscular disease caused by HMGCR mutation and statin myopathy treatable with mevalonolactone.
Yuval YogevZamir ShorerArie KoifmanOhad WormserMax DrabkinDaniel HalperinVadim DolginRegina Proskorovski-OhayonNoam HadarGeula DavidovHila NudelmanRaz ZarivachIlan ShelefYonatan PerezOhad S BirkPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
Myopathy is the main adverse effect of the widely prescribed statin drug class. Statins exert their beneficial effect by inhibiting HMG CoA-reductase, the rate-controlling enzyme of the mevalonate pathway. The mechanism of statin myopathy is yet to be resolved, and its treatment is insufficient. Through homozygosity mapping and whole exome sequencing, followed by functional analysis using confocal microscopy and biochemical and biophysical methods, we demonstrate that a distinct form of human limb girdle muscular disease is caused by a pathogenic homozygous loss-of-function missense mutation in HMG CoA reductase ( HMGCR ), encoding HMG CoA-reductase . We biochemically synthesized and purified mevalonolactone, never administered to human patients before, and establish the safety of its oral administration in mice. We then show that its oral administration is effective in treating a human patient with no significant adverse effects. Furthermore, we demonstrate that oral mevalonolactone resolved statin-induced myopathy in mice. We conclude that HMGCR mutation causes a late-onset severe progressive muscular disease, which shows similar features to statin-induced myopathy. Our findings indicate that mevalonolactone is effective both in the treatment of hereditary HMGCR myopathy and in a murine model of statin myopathy. Further large clinical trials are in place to enable the clinical use of mevalonolactone both in the rare orphan disease and in the more common statin myopathy.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- late onset
- early onset
- muscular dystrophy
- cardiovascular disease
- coronary artery disease
- endothelial cells
- clinical trial
- high glucose
- low density lipoprotein
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- high resolution
- end stage renal disease
- fatty acid
- multiple sclerosis
- type diabetes
- drug induced
- newly diagnosed
- emergency department
- adipose tissue
- duchenne muscular dystrophy
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- mass spectrometry
- high fat diet induced
- body composition
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- case report
- phase ii
- replacement therapy
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- patient reported outcomes
- wild type