Hydralazine inhibits cysteamine dioxygenase to treat preeclampsia and senesce glioblastoma
- Janine Ellenberger
- Oct 15
- 1 min read
Updated: 3 days ago
Shishikura K, Li J, Chen Y, McKnight NR, Keeley TP, Bustin KA, Barr EW, Chilkamari SR, Ayub M, Kim SW, Lin Z, Hu RM, Hicks K, Wang X, O'Rourke DM, Bollinger Jr. JM, Binder ZA, Parsons WH, Martemyanov KA, Liu A, Matthews ML
Science Advances | Vol 11, Issue 42 |
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Abstract
Hydralazine (HYZ), a treatment for preeclampsia and hypertensive crisis, is listed by the World Health Organization as an essential medicine. Its mode of action has remained unknown through its seven decades of clinical use. Here, we identify 2-aminoethanethiol dioxygenase (ADO), a key mediator of targeted protein degradation, as a selective HYZ target.
The drug chelates ADO’s metallocofactor and can alkylate one of its ligands. The resultant inactivation stabilizes regulators of G protein signaling (RGS4 and RGS5) that ADO normally marks for proteolysis, explaining the drug’s vasodilatory activity and comporting with observations of diminished RGS levels in both clinical preeclampsia and a mouse model thereof. Its inhibition of ADO suggested use of HYZ against glioblastoma (GBM); indeed, a single dose robustly senesces cultured GBM cells.
By establishing ADO as a nexus for GBM and preeclampsia and connecting it to HYZ, the results create opportunities for directed tailoring of the old drug for new therapies.
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