New drug promises relief for inflammatory pain, scientists say

Researchers have discovered that a compound they developed could potentially serve as a painkiller, with particular utility for East Asians with an alcohol-metabolizing enzyme mutation.

- By Becky Bach

Daria Mochly-Rosen found that a compound thought to be nonaddictive reduced inflammatory pain in mice and rats.
Steve Fisch

Pain from inflammation sidelines thousands of Americans each year. Many face a tough choice: deal with the pain, take a potentially addictive opioid or use a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that may increase risk for cardiovascular disease or gastrointestinal bleeding.

Now, researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered a compound thought to be nonaddictive and safe for the heart and gastrointestinal system that reduces inflammatory pain in mice and rats. They call the compound Alda-1.

“Finding a new pain medication is important because we need a safer drug; there are 17,000 deaths from prescription opiate overdoses a year alone,” said Daria Mochly-Rosen, professor of chemical and systems biology.

A paper describing the researchers’ findings published Aug. 27 in Science Translational Medicine. Mochly-Rosen is senior author of the paper, and former Stanford postdoctoral scholars Vanessa Zambelli, PhD, and Eric Gross, MD, PhD, are the lead authors.

Versatile enzyme

The researchers have been working with Alda-1 for more than five years. They discovered it while searching for the reason that moderate drinkers have less-severe heart attacks than nondrinkers or heavy alcohol drinkers. They found that alcohol increases the activity of an enzyme called aldehyde dehydrogenase 2. This enzyme breaks down a byproduct of alcohol called acetaldehyde, forming free radicals that can damage cells. The enzyme also breaks down additional toxic aldehydes that are formed in the body because of oxidative stress, such as that occurring during a heart attack. Alda-1, an abbreviation for aldehyde dehydrogenase activator 1, kicks the enzyme into high gear, allowing it to break down toxic aldehydes more quickly and leaving less time for them to cause damage. (Coincidentally, Alda is also the name of Mochly-Rosen’s 87-year-old mother.)

Now, Alda-1 has shown its prowess as a painkiller. 

Mochly-Rosen and her team knew that inflammation causes toxic aldehyde accumulation. But no one had asked whether the enzyme aldehyde dehydrogenase 2, which breaks down these aldehydes, regulates inflammatory pain.

“We made what may appear as a crazy leap,” Mochly-Rosen said.

The researchers conducted a series of experiments to illuminate the enzyme’s role in the perception of inflammatory pain. First, they demonstrated that mice and rats with an inflamed paw felt less pain when they received Alda-1. Yet the underlying condition, the inflammation, remained unchanged after Alda-1 treatment.

Then, Che-Hong Chen, PhD, a senior research scientist and co-author of the paper, bioengineered a mouse with a mutation in aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 that mimics a mutation found in more than a third of Han Chinese, a group that makes up 8 percent of the world population. In humans, this mutation causes flushing after alcohol consumption because of excess acetaldehyde accumulation.

Easing the pain

In mice, the mutation increased sensitivity to inflammatory pain. The researchers then demonstrated increased pain response by injecting the mutant mice with aldehydes and comparing their reactions to those of normal mice. The mice with the mutated enzyme licked and flicked their paws longer than normal mice. When treated with Alda-1, both groups of mice appeared to feel less pain.

Mochly-Rosen said her team plans to investigate whether humans with the mutated enzyme are also more sensitive to pain.

She said the findings demonstrate the importance of basic research.

We focused our research on this enzyme for a completely different reason, and because we are in academia, we could follow a serendipitous finding and develop a new research interest.

“I’m not a pain expert, and pain was never a research focus of my lab,” Mochly-Rosen said. “We focused our research on this enzyme for a completely different reason, and because we are in academia, we could follow a serendipitous finding and develop a new research interest. Hopefully, this finding will translate into helping people who have inflammatory pain.”

Gross is now an instructor of anesthesiology, perioperative and pain medicine at Stanford. Researchers at the Butantan Institute in Brazil also contributed to the study.

The study was funded by a National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism MERIT award, the Foundation for Research Support of the State of São Paulo and the National Institutes of Health (grants HL-109212 and 2011/08873-8).

Mochly-Rosen and Chen founded ALDEA Pharmaceuticals, but Mochly-Rosen is not a consultant for the company. None of the work in her lab is supported by or in collaboration with the company. Stanford, Mochly-Rosen, Chen and Zambelli hold a patent on Alda-1.

Information about Stanford’s Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, which also supported the work, is available at http://chemsysbio.stanford.edu

About Stanford Medicine

Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.

2023 ISSUE 3

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