Fraser J. Sim, PhD.

Fraser Sim, PhD, and colleagues found that transplanted human stem cells treated with solifenacin boost myelin synthesis and improve auditory function in mice.

Approved Drug Boosts Myelination; May Help Treat Multiple Sclerosis

Published March 6, 2015 This content is archived.

story based on news release by ellen goldbaum

University at Buffalo researchers are the first to identify solifenacin as a drug target to promote stem cell therapy for myelin-based disease, such as multiple sclerosis.

“Our hypothesis is that in multiple sclerosis, the oligodendrocyte progenitor cells seem to get stuck. ”
Fraser J. Sim, PhD
Assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology
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Preclinical Study Shows Promising Outcome

The preclinical study shows that the anti-muscarinic drug, approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat overactive bladder, can boost myelination by targeting human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells.

“We have identified a way to improve human myelination,” says lead author Fraser J. Sim, PhD, assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology and a faculty member in the Neuroscience Program.

The promising results have prompted Sim and his colleagues to seek funding for a small human trial.

Myelin Damage May Signify Stalled Cell Maturation

In MS and other neurological diseases, myelin — the fatty insulator that enables communication between nerve cells — is damaged.

Some remyelination occurs initially, but this ability to regenerate dissipates as the disease progresses and the patient ages.

Sim’s prior research on stem cells and myelination found that a critical phase of remyelination fades with age.

“Our hypothesis is that in MS, the oligodendrocyte progenitor cells seem to get stuck,” says Sim. “When these cells don’t mature properly, they don’t differentiate into myelinating oligodendrocytes.”

Seeking to Stimulate Myelin Production

Sim and his colleagues first characterized the molecular pathways governing the differentiation of human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells. They then worked to identify drug candidates that would promote differentiation and myelin production. 

They found the opposite result — that differentiation was completely blocked — when they activated a muscarinic type 3 receptor on human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells.

“So we asked: Could we boost differentiation if we had something that blocks instead of activates this receptor?” Sim says.

The researchers then transplanted human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells into mice that could not make myelin. When they administered solifenacin to these mice, differentiation and myelin synthesis increased.

Improved Auditory Response Results

The researchers also found improved response to auditory signals in treated animals — a sign that the remyelination improved physical function.

They chose to test auditory brainstem response because myelin affects the rate of brain wave activity in response to sounds, Sim explains. To conduct the tests, Sim partnered with co-author Richard J. Salvi, PhD, SUNY Distinguished Professor of communicative disorders and sciences, also a faculty member in the UB Neuroscience Program.

The tests result in a readout with waves that should show a particular time pattern, since it takes a certain amount of time for a signal to travel from the ear and through the brain, says Sim.

“When there isn’t enough myelin, the signaling slows down; if you add myelin, you should see the signals speed up.”

UB Students Are Co-First Authors

The paper, “Anti-Muscarinic Adjunct Therapy Accelerates Functional Human Oligodendrocyte Repair,” has been published in the Journal of Neuroscience.

Co-first authors are Kavitha Abiraman, MS ’13, a graduate of UB’s Neuroscience Program, and Suyog U. Pol, a PhD student in biomedical engineering.

Additional UB co-authors are: 

  • Melanie A. O’Bara, research scientist; Zainab Khaku, master’s student; Jing Wang, PhD student; David Thorn, PhD ’15; Exinne C. Ekwegbalu, BS/MS ’13; Jun-Xu Li, MD, PhD, assistant professor, all in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology
  • Bansi H. Vedia, BS ’12, who graduated from UB’s biotechnology program in the Department of Biotechnical and Clinical Laboratory Sciences
  • Guang-Di Chen, research professor in the Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences

The study was funded by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the Kalec Multiple Sclerosis Foundation and the Empire State Stem Cell Fund.