• Shock · Dec 2021

    Review

    Repurposing of Clinically Approved Poly-(Adp-Ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors For The Therapy of Sepsis.

    • Sidnéia Sousa Santos, BrunialtiMilena Karina ColoMKCDivision of Infectious Diseasses, Paulista School of Medicine, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil., Francisco Garcia Soriano, Csaba Szabo, and Reinaldo Salomão.
    • Division of Infectious Diseasses, Paulista School of Medicine, Federal University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
    • Shock. 2021 Dec 1; 56 (6): 901909901-909.

    AbstractSepsis' pathogenesis involves multiple mechanisms that lead to a dysregulation of the host's response. Significant efforts have been made in search of interventions that can reverse this situation and increase patient survival. Poly (ADP-polymerase) (PARP) is a constitutive nuclear and mitochondrial enzyme, which functions as a co-activator and co-repressor of gene transcription, thus regulating the production of inflammatory mediators. Several studies have already demonstrated an overactivation of PARP1 in various human pathophysiological conditions and that its inhibition has benefits in regulating intracellular processes. The PARP inhibitor olaparib, originally developed for cancer therapy, paved the way for the expansion of its clinical use for nononcological indications. In this review we discuss sepsis as one of the possible indications for the use of olaparib and other clinically approved PARP inhibitors as modulators of the inflammatory response and cellular dysfunction. The benefit of olaparib and other clinically approved PARP inhibitors has already been demonstrated in several experimental models of human diseases, such as neurodegeneration and neuroinflammation, acute hepatitis, skeletal muscle disorders, aging and acute ischemic stroke, protecting, for example, from the deterioration of the blood-brain barrier, restoring the cellular levels of NAD+, improving mitochondrial function and biogenesis and, among other effects, reducing oxidative stress and pro-inflammatory mediators, such as TNF-α, IL1-β, IL-6, and VCAM1. These data demonstrated that repositioning of clinically approved PARP inhibitors may be effective in protecting against hemodynamic dysfunction, metabolic dysfunction, and multiple organ failure in patients with sepsis. Age and gender affect the response to PARP inhibitors, the mechanisms underlying the lack of many protective effects in females and aged animals should be further investigated and be cautiously considered in designing clinical trials.Copyright © 2021 by the Shock Society.

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