Veterinary Researchers Studying Enzymes That Help Body Self-Repair

Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, were looking for a way to control insects and found an enzyme in the 80’s—called JHEH—that, when inhibited, prevents caterpillars from becoming butterflies. This work led to the discovery of an equivalent enzyme in mammals, called soluble epoxide hydrolase or sEH.

After spending a few years at UC Davis, Alonso Guedes, DVM, MS, Ph.D., associate professor of Anesthesia and Pain Medicine in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, joined the University of Minnesota, where he is working to further understand how to use sEH to advance pain management in veterinary medicine.

"We mammals have a similar enzyme," Guedes says. "However, most of us don't undergo metamorphosis," he adds with a smile. "We autoregulate and self-repair. And in mammals, the presence of this enzyme has the opposite effect—it diminishes the body's ability to self-repair. Inhibiting it actually allows our cells to do their work."

Guedes and his team are working to understand how blocking this enzyme can help improve mammal health, starting with horses suffering from laminitis—a severely painful disease in the hoof. Most horses with laminitis do not respond well to current pain medications and treatments, and euthanasia is currently the most common outcome for severe cases.

“The hoof wall is attached to the bone by a very tough tissue that interconnects like a zipper, which is called the digital laminae,” says Guedes, “Certain proteins hold the digital laminae together, and when there is inflammation, such as with laminitis, those proteins break down and the hoof's connection to the bone breaks apart."

Guedes and his team want to know if sEH is involved in the breakdown of these important proteins, and they are already seeing evidence confirming this in mice. "It seems like inhibiting the enzyme could potentially protect some of the linking proteins that hold the tissues together in the hoof," he says. They've developed a compound that inhibits the enzyme and allows for more blood flow and delivery of nutrients to a harmed area.

But crucial questions remain. Primarily, would inhibiting the enzyme allow the body to repair already-damaged proteins and cells? Secondly, at what rate does inhibiting the enzyme slow the process of deterioration? But most importantly, could we prevent damage and deterioration by intervening early on?

At the University of Minnesota College of Veterinary Medicine's Large Animal Hospital, Guedes has used the experimental compound on a few different equine patients with laminitis as well as arthritis. In many cases, the compound works in conjunction with a pain medication to provide the animal both pain relief and bodily recovery. Results for many of Guedes' patients have been visible within a matter of days.

 

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