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Terapia de las enfermedades por depósito lisosomal: actualidad y perspectivas

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TLDR
The combination of corrective therapy (CT) with paliative therapy (PT) is the most promising strategy to solve most of the multisystem manifestations of LSD.
Abstract
Lysosomal storage diseases (LSD) are caused by monogenic mutations in genes coding for multiple aberrant proteins involved in the catabolism of complex lipids, glycosaminoglycans, oligosaccharides, or nucleic acids. The pathophysiology of the LSD is due to abnormal accumulation of non-hydrolyzed substrate in the lysosomes, affecting the architecture and function of cells, tissues and organs. Due to their genic and allelic heterogeneity the LSD present a wide clinical spectrum in severity of symptoms, evolution and age of onset. The therapeutic strategy has two goals: 1) Palliative management of symptoms (splenectomy, surgery to improve or restore joints or bones, drugs for CNS symptoms, etc.), and 2) The correction of activity of the mutant protein, the former has two approaches: A) Replacing deficient protein (bone marrow transplantation, hematopoietic stem cells or umbilical cord blood cells; replacement with recombinant enzyme and gene therapy) and B) Activate or enhanced the functionality of the mutant enzyme with therapeutic small molecules. Neither of the known treatments is able to address all aspects of these multisystemic disorders, nor cure the patients. Currently, the combination of corrective therapy (CT) with paliative therapy (PT) is the most promising strategy to solve most of the multisystem manifestations. The multidisciplinary medical care is fundamental for diagnosis, treatment and control of disease. Nanotechnology opens a promising new era in the treatment of LSD. Finally, the LSD that has CT must be included in newborn screening programs in order to implement timely treatment and prevent irreversible damage.

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Lysosomal targeting strategies for design and delivery of bioactive for therapeutic interventions

TL;DR: The fundamentals of membrane trafficking, subcellular organisation, strategies to target lysosomes and its implications for the advance design of efficient drug delivery vectors for safe and effective therapies are illustrated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

High Incidence of Later-Onset Fabry Disease Revealed by Newborn Screening*

TL;DR: The results suggest that the later-onset phenotype of Fabry disease is underdiagnosed among males with cardiac, cerebrovascular, and/or renal disease and raises ethical issues related to when screening should be performed--in the neonatal period or at early maturity, perhaps in conjunction with screening for other treatable adult-ONSet disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cell biology of lysosomal storage disorders.

TL;DR: The biochemistry of lysosomal storage disorders is summarized and downstream cellular pathways that are potentially affected in these disorders are discussed and that might help to delineate their pathological mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multifunctional Nanocarriers for diagnostics, drug delivery and targeted treatment across blood-brain barrier: perspectives on tracking and neuroimaging.

TL;DR: A proposed roadmap for ongoing and future research directions is discussed in detail with emphasis on the development of novel approaches for functionalization, targeting and imaging of nano-based drug delivery systems, a cutting-edge technology poised to change the ways medicine is administered.
Book

Treating lysosomal storage diseases with pharmacological chaperones: from concept to clinics

TL;DR: The strengths and drawbacks of the potential therapies available for LSDs are discussed and it is proposed that future research should be directed towards the development of treatment protocols based on the combination of different therapies to improve the clinical outcome of LSD patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pompe disease in infants and children

TL;DR: Early disease recognition is increasingly important so that patients with this often fatal disease can receive prompt and appropriate therapy, and in infants, this recognition will be critical, because the available window of treatment after diagnosis is extremely short.