Cysteamine-bicalutamide combination treatment restores alpha-ketoglutarate and corrects proximal tubule phenotype in cystinosis
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Abstract
Nephropathic cystinosis is a severe monogenetic kidney disorder caused by mutations in CTNS , encoding the lysosomal transporter cystinosin, resulting in lysosomal cystine accumulation. The sole treatment, cysteamine, slows down the disease progression, but does not correct the established proximal tubulopathy. Here, we developed a new therapeutic strategy by applying an omics-based strategy to expand our knowledge on the complexity of the disease and prioritize drug targets in cystinosis. We identified alpha-ketoglutarate as a key metabolite linking cystinosin loss, lysosomal autophagy defect and proximal tubular impairment in cystinosis. This insight offered a bicalutamide-cysteamine combination treatment as a novel dual target pharmacological approach for the phenotypical correction of cystinotic proximal tubule cells, patient-derived kidney tubuloids and cystinotic zebrafish.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00