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Cancer drug became the first pill for premature aging

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IN THE USA approved the first drug for patients with Hutchinson-Guildford Progeria – an incurable congenital disease reminiscent of premature aging. It is a repurposed anticancer drug. According to the results of clinical trials, it can prolong the life of patients from several months to several years – depending on what age and how long it is taken.

Progeria Hutchinson-Guildford is the most famous and most severe of the diseases of premature aging. It manifests itself from birth, when children are born with a number of signs typical for the elderly: they have wrinkled skin, swollen joints, a disproportionately wide head and a “beak-shaped” face narrowed to the chin.

The cause of all these pathologies – as well as many others related to internal organs – is the protein lamin A. Normally, it is needed to organize the space inside the cell nucleus: it lines the nuclear membrane from the inside and fixes DNA strands around it. To ensure that lamin A is near the nuclear envelope, it is recognized by the enzyme farnesyltransferase and hangs a hydrophobic “tail” on it. With this “tail,” lamin A is anchored in the membrane, taking its place in the nucleus. Later, other enzymes cut off this “tail”, and lamin A remains close to the shell, but is not directly associated with it.

People with progeria have a mutation in the lamin A gene that makes the protein shorter than usual. Therefore, at first everything goes according to plan: farnesyltransferase recognizes it and hangs a “tail” on it, and the “tail” of the mutant protein is incorporated into the nuclear membrane. But after that, other enzymes cannot rid it of the “tail”, since the mutant lamin A is deprived of a site for them to grab onto. Therefore, it remains embedded in the membrane of the nucleus, due to which the entire nucleus loses its elasticity, the organization of DNA inside is disrupted, it becomes difficult for the cell to divide and copy genetic information without errors. As a result, people with this mutation rarely survive the 15th birthday and die from typical age-related diseases, such as heart failure or stroke.

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