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The cellular effects of thalidomide

The drug reduces the amount of a protein that is essential for limb development.

eLife
Published in
3 min readOct 19, 2018

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Thalidomide was sold in the 1950s and 1960s as a sedative and anti-nausea medication for pregnant women suffering from morning sickness. Studies in mice and other animals had suggested thalidomide was safe and led some countries to allow the drug to be used in humans. By 1961, it became clear that thalidomide use by pregnant women led to serious birth defects, and the drug was removed from the market. By then, thalidomide had caused birth defects in over 10,000 babies, a tragedy that has been described as the biggest man-made medical disaster in human history. It led many countries to adopt tougher standards for drug safety.

Thalidomide and similar drugs are now used with great success to treat leprosy and various blood cancers. But questions remain about exactly how the drugs work and how they cause birth defects like shortened arms and legs. Previous studies have shown that thalidomide binds to a protein called cereblon, which marks other proteins for destruction and removal from the cell. Thalidomide hijacks cereblon and causes it to tag the wrong proteins.

To learn more about how thalidomide causes birth defects, Donovan et al. treated human embryonic stem cells and cancer cells with thalidomide and related drugs. Analyzing the proteins inside the cells revealed that the drugs caused dramatic reductions in the amount of a protein called SALL4, which is essential for limb development. It was already known that mutations in the gene that produces SALL4 cause two conditions called Duane Radial Ray syndrome and Holt-Oram syndrome. Both conditions can result in birth defects like those seen in babies exposed to thalidomide.

As well as showing that thalidomide-hijacked cereblon marks SALL4 for destruction, Donovan et al. also reveal why mice do not develop birth defects when exposed to thalidomide. This is because genetic differences make the mouse cereblon proteins unable to tag SALL4. Researchers could now build on these results to develop safer versions of thalidomide that do not target SALL4 while still successfully treating leprosy and cancers.

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