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amiloride-als
Amiloride ALS Trial
Overview
Amiloride is a potassium-sparing diuretic that has been investigated for potential neuroprotective effects in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The rationale stems from its ability to block acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs), which may be involved in motor neuron degeneration, and its effects on cellular pH and excitotoxicity[@bennion2020].
Trial Details
- Phase: Phase 2
- Status: Completed
- Drug: Amiloride (amiloride hydrochloride)
- Dosage: 10-20 mg daily
- Patient Population: Adults with definite or probable ALS
- Duration: 12 months
- ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00879710
Mechanism of Action
Amiloride works through multiple mechanisms:
Ion Channel Blockade
- ASIC Inhibition: Blocks acid-sensing ion channels[@waldmann2019]
- Sodium Channels: Modulates voltage-gated sodium channels
- Calcium Channels: Affects calcium channel function
- pH Sensitivity: Reduces acid-induced neuronal damage
Excitotoxicity Modulation
- Glutamate Reduction: May reduce excitotoxic damage
- Calcium Homeostasis: Modulates calcium influx
- Neuronal Protection: Protects against acidotoxicity
Additional Effects
- Neuroinflammation: May modulate inflammatory response
- Oxidative Stress: Some antioxidant properties
- Mitochondrial Function: May preserve mitochondrial health
Trial Design
The clinical trial employed:
Amiloride ALS Trial
Overview
Amiloride is a potassium-sparing diuretic that has been investigated for potential neuroprotective effects in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The rationale stems from its ability to block acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs), which may be involved in motor neuron degeneration, and its effects on cellular pH and excitotoxicity[@bennion2020].
Trial Details
- Phase: Phase 2
- Status: Completed
- Drug: Amiloride (amiloride hydrochloride)
- Dosage: 10-20 mg daily
- Patient Population: Adults with definite or probable ALS
- Duration: 12 months
- ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00879710
Mechanism of Action
Amiloride works through multiple mechanisms:
Ion Channel Blockade
- ASIC Inhibition: Blocks acid-sensing ion channels[@waldmann2019]
- Sodium Channels: Modulates voltage-gated sodium channels
- Calcium Channels: Affects calcium channel function
- pH Sensitivity: Reduces acid-induced neuronal damage
Excitotoxicity Modulation
- Glutamate Reduction: May reduce excitotoxic damage
- Calcium Homeostasis: Modulates calcium influx
- Neuronal Protection: Protects against acidotoxicity
Additional Effects
- Neuroinflammation: May modulate inflammatory response
- Oxidative Stress: Some antioxidant properties
- Mitochondrial Function: May preserve mitochondrial health
Trial Design
The clinical trial employed:
Design Elements
Endpoints
- Primary: Safety and tolerability
- Secondary: ALSFRS-R decline rate
- Biomarker: pH-related markers
Results
Key findings:
Safety
- Generally Safe: Favorable safety profile
- Hyperkalemia: Potassium monitoring required
- Renal Function: Monitor kidney function
- Blood Pressure: Generally minimal effects
Efficacy
- Safety Confirmed: Primary endpoint met
- Efficacy: Not powered for efficacy
- Signal Detection: Exploratory endpoints collected
Clinical Significance
Amiloride trials:
Background: ALS Pathogenesis and Acid-Sensing Ion Channels
Understanding ALS Pathogenesis
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the selective loss of upper and lower motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. The disease leads to progressive muscle weakness, paralysis, and typically results in death within 2-5 years of symptom onset. Despite significant research efforts, the precise mechanisms underlying motor neuron degeneration remain incompletely understood, though multiple pathogenic pathways have been implicated[@pgk7].
The major pathogenic mechanisms in ALS include:
Excitotoxicity: Excessive glutamate signaling leads to overactivation of ionotropic glutamate receptors (AMPA and NMDA receptors), causing calcium influx and subsequent neuronal damage. This mechanism led to the development of riluzole, the only FDA-approved disease-modifying therapy for ALS[@pgk8].
Oxidative Stress: Motor neurons are particularly vulnerable to oxidative damage due to their high metabolic demand, low antioxidant capacity, and iron accumulation. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) damage proteins, lipids, and DNA.
Mitochondrial Dysfunction: Defects in mitochondrial respiration, dynamics, and apoptosis contribute to energy failure and cell death in motor neurons.
Neuroinflammation: Activated microglia and astrocytes release pro-inflammatory cytokines that exacerbate motor neuron injury.
Protein Aggregation: Abnormal accumulation of TDP-43 (TAR DNA-binding protein 43) inclusions is a hallmark pathological feature in most ALS cases.
The Role of Acid-Sensing Ion Channels
Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are a family of voltage-insensitive cation channels that are activated by decreases in extracellular pH. Four genes (ASIC1-4) encode multiple isoforms with distinct physiological properties. ASIC1a, which forms homomeric channels sensitive to mild acidosis, is particularly abundant in the central nervous system[@pgk1].
ASIC1a in Motor Neuron Disease
ASIC1a is highly expressed in motor neurons and becomes activated under pathological conditions:
Activation Mechanisms
ASIC1a activation by acidosis triggers[@pgk2]:
- Sodium Influx: Depolarizes the neuronal membrane
- Calcium Influx: Direct calcium entry through ASIC1a channels
- Neuronal Death: Sustained activation leads to necrotic and apoptotic cell death
- Inflammatory Responses: ASIC activation stimulates cytokine release
pH Dysregulation in ALS
The ALS spinal cord environment shows evidence of significant pH dysregulation[@pgk3]:
Extracellular Acidosis: Multiple factors contribute to acidic extracellular milieu:
- Increased glycolytic flux in activated astrocytes
- Lactic acid accumulation from impaired perfusion
- Carbon dioxide buildup from mitochondrial dysfunction
- Inflammatory cell metabolic activity
- Direct activation of ASICs
- Impaired mitochondrial function
- Accelerated protein aggregation
- Blood-brain barrier disruption
Preclinical Evidence for Amiloride in ALS
Animal Model Studies
Preclinical studies in ALS mouse models (SOD1G93A transgenic mice) have provided evidence supporting ASIC inhibition as a therapeutic strategy:
Motor Neuron Survival: Amiloride treatment:
- Reduces motor neuron loss in spinal cord cultures
- Decreases activation of apoptotic pathways
- Improves survival in vitro
- Delayed disease onset in some studies
- Reduced disease progression
- Improved motor function
- Reduced ASIC1a-mediated currents
- Decreased calcium influx
- Attenuated excitotoxic damage
Mechanism of Action: Multi-Target Effects
Amiloride provides neuroprotection through several mechanisms[@pgk6]:
Direct Effects
Indirect Effects
Clinical Trial Design and Implementation
Trial Overview (NCT00879710)
The amiloride ALS trial was designed to evaluate safety and explore potential efficacy:
Patient Population
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age 18-80 years
- Definite or probable ALS per El Escorial criteria
- Disease duration less than 3 years
- Forced vital capacity (FVC) > 60% predicted
- Stable riluzole therapy for at least 30 days
- Ability to provide informed consent
- Significant renal impairment
- Serum potassium > 5.0 mEq/L
- Severe cardiac disease
- Active malignancy
- Pregnancy or lactation
- Prior participation in other trials within 30 days
Treatment Regimen
| Parameter | Details |
|-----------|---------|
| Drug | Amiloride hydrochloride |
| Dose | 10-20 mg daily |
| Route | Oral |
| Duration | 12 months |
| Background | Riluzole 100 mg daily |
| Control | Placebo |
Endpoints
Primary Endpoints:
- Safety and tolerability (adverse event monitoring)
- Change in serum potassium
- Renal function parameters
- ALSFRS-R decline rate
- FVC change
- Survival
- Quality of life measures
- Biomarker analysis
- Pharmacokinetic sampling
- Subgroup analyses by genotype (C9orf72, SOD1)
Safety Monitoring
Given amiloride's known pharmacology, rigorous safety monitoring was implemented:
Electrolyte Monitoring:
- Serum potassium weekly for first month
- Biweekly thereafter
- ECG monitoring if hyperkalemia develops
- Serum creatinine and BUN at baseline and regular intervals
- Creatinine clearance calculations
- Blood pressure monitoring
- Weight and fluid status
Results and Interpretation
Safety Findings
The trial demonstrated that amiloride was generally well-tolerated in the ALS population:
Adverse Events:
- Most common: mild hyperkalemia
- Manageable with dietary potassium restriction
- No treatment discontinuations due to electrolyte abnormalities
- No serious adverse events attributed to study drug
- Potassium elevations were predictable and manageable
- Renal function remained stable
- No cases of severe hyperkalemia
Efficacy Signals
While not powered for efficacy, the trial collected important data:
ALSFRS-R:
- Trend toward slower decline in treatment arm
- Not statistically significant
- Hypothesis-generating for future studies
- Similar decline rates between groups
- No clear benefit
- Exploratory biomarker analyses completed
- Publication pending
Drug Repurposing for Neurodegenerative Diseases
The Repurposing Concept
Drug repurposing (also called drug repositioning) offers several advantages over de novo drug development[@pgk5]:
Advantages:
- Established safety profiles
- Known pharmacokinetics
- Reduced development timeline
- Lower development costs
- Established manufacturing processes
- Patent and regulatory considerations
- May require new formulations
- Dose optimization for new indications
Amiloride as a Neuroprotective Agent
Amiloride has been investigated in multiple neurological conditions:
| Condition | Evidence Level | Status |
|-----------|----------------|--------|
| ALS | Phase 2 | Completed |
| Stroke | Preclinical | Investigational |
| Multiple Sclerosis | Preclinical | Investigational |
| Parkinson's Disease | Preclinical | Investigational |
| Traumatic Brain Injury | Preclinical | Investigational |
Competitive Landscape
Other ALS Drug Development Programs
| Drug | Mechanism | Phase | Company |
|------|-----------|-------|---------|
| Riluzole | Glutamate modulation | Approved | Sanofi |
| Edaravone | Antioxidant | Approved | Mitsubishi Tanabe |
| Tofersen | SOD1 ASO | Approved | Biogen |
| AMX0035 | Relyvrio | Approved | Amylyx |
| BIIB105 | ATXN2 ASO | Phase 3 | Biogen |
| CNM-Au8 | Catalase | Phase 2/3 | Clene |
| Pridopidine | Dopamine D2 | Phase 2 | Prilenia |
ASIC Inhibitors in Development
Several ASIC-targeting compounds are in development:
Future Directions
Combination Therapy Approaches
Future ALS treatments may combine multiple mechanisms:
Rationale for Combination:
- ALS is multi-factorial
- Single mechanisms may be insufficient
- Synergistic effects possible
- Riluzole + Amiloride: Glutamate + ASIC modulation
- Edaravone + Amiloride: Oxidative stress + pH modulation
- Anti-ASIC + Anti-Excitotoxicity
Biomarker Development
Developing biomarkers for ASIC targeting:
Patient Selection:
- ASIC1a expression markers
- pH-related biomarkers
- Imaging endpoints
- Calcium imaging
- Electrophysiological measures
- Functional outcomes
Lessons Learned
The amiloride trial contributed to understanding:
Conclusion
The amiloride ALS trial represents an important example of drug repurposing for neurodegenerative diseases. While the trial did not demonstrate clear efficacy (though it was not powered for this), it established the safety profile of amiloride in ALS patients and contributed to our understanding of acid-sensing ion channels in motor neuron disease.
The rationale for ASIC inhibition in ALS remains compelling given the preclinical evidence and the role of pH dysregulation in ALS pathogenesis. Future studies with more potent or selective ASIC inhibitors may provide further validation of this therapeutic approach.
Related Pages
- [Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis](/diseases/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis)
- [ALS Treatment Pipeline](/therapeutics/als-treatment-pipeline)
- [Riluzole ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/riluzole-als)
- [Excitotoxicity Mechanisms](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity-als)
- [Motor Neuron Biology](/cell-types/motor-neurons)
- [Ion Channel Dysfunction](/mechanisms/ion-channel-dysfunction)
- [Tofersen SOD1 ASO](/clinical-trials/tofersen-als)
- [Edaravone ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/edaravone-als)
- [AMX0035 Relyvrio](/clinical-trials/amx0035-als)
Competitive Landscape: ALS Drug Development
Approved Disease-Modifying Therapies
The ALS therapeutic landscape has evolved significantly[@thompson2023]:
Riluzole (Rilutek):
- [First FDA-approved disease-modifying therapy (1995)](/genes/th)
- [Reduces glutamate excitotoxicity](/entities/glutamate)
- [Extends survival by 2-3 months](/genes/th)
- [Standard of care background therapy](/genes/ar)
- [Ant](/technologies/quanterix-simoa)ioxidant mechanism
- [Approved based on slower functional decli](/genes/nct)ne
- Requires intravenous infusion
- 10-day initial cycle with maintenance cycles
- First gene-specific therapy for SOD1 ALS
- Antisense oligonucleotide targeting SOD1
- Demonstrated biomarker reduction
- Significant clinical benefit in fast progressors
- Combination of sodium phenylbutyrate and taurursodiol
- Mitochondrial dysfunction and ER stress targets
- Demonstrated survival benefit
- Oral formulation
Drugs in Development
| Drug | Mechanism | Phase | Company |
|------|-----------|-------|---------|
| BIIB105 | ATXN2 ASO | Phase 3 | Biogen |
| CNM-Au8 | Catalase | Phase 2/3 | Clene |
| Pridopidine | D2 modulator | Phase 2 | Prilenia |
| Talmavirsen | C9orf72 ASO | Phase 1 | Wave Life Sciences |
| Apicidin | HDAC | Phase 2 | A Cause |
ASIC Inhibitors Beyond Amiloride
The ASIC targeting field continues to evolve:
Mambalgins:
- Peptide toxins from snake venom
- Potent ASIC1a inhibition
- Research stage only
- Small molecule ASIC1a inhibitor
- Preclinical proof of concept
- Not in clinical development
- Some non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- Weak ASIC inhibition
- Not specific for ALS
Mechanistic Insights: pH and Neurodegeneration
Extracellular pH in the CNS
Normal brain extracellular pH is maintained at approximately 7.3 through multiple mechanisms:
Physiological Regulation:
- Astrocyte buffering
- Blood-brain barrier transport
- Cerebral blood flow regulation
- Neuronal metabolic activity
- Increased glycolytic activity
- Lactic acidosis from hypoxia
- Inflammatory cell metabolism
- Mitochondrial dysfunction
pH-Dependent Pathological Processes
Acidosis promotes neurodegeneration through multiple pathways:
ASIC Activation:
- Direct calcium influx
- Membrane depolarization
- Apoptotic pathway activation
- pH affects protein folding
- Aggregation kinetics modulated
- Clearance mechanisms impaired
- Enzyme activity pH-sensitive
- Proton gradient disruption
- ATP production reduced
Therapeutic Implications
Understanding pH dysregulation suggests therapeutic approaches:
Buffering Strategies:
- Dietary alkaline supplementation
- Sodium bicarbonate administration
- Investigational approaches
- Selective inhibitors
- Genetic approaches
- Antibody-based blockade
Clinical Trial Design Lessons
ALS Clinical Trial Considerations
The amiloride trial provides insights for future ALS studies:
Endpoint Selection:
- ALSFRS-R is standard but shows variability
- Survival remains gold standard
- Composite endpoints under development
- Biomarker endpoints increasingly used
- Disease duration affects treatment response
- Genotype can define subgroups
- Bulbar vs limb onset differences
- Respiratory function baseline
- 12 months may be insufficient
- Longer trials improve signal detection
- Open-label extensions valuable
- Natural history data collection
Biomarker Integration
Modern ALS trials incorporate multiple biomarkers:
Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL):
- Blood and CSF marker
- Correlates with disease progression
- Response to treatment effects
- SOD1, C9orf72, FUS genotyping
- Predictive for disease course
- Trial enrichment possible
- MRI for cortical thinning
- PET for neuroinflammation
- Emerging techniques
Future Directions for ASIC Targeting
Preclinical Pipeline
Ongoing research continues to validate ASIC as a target:
Novel Compounds:
- More selective inhibitors in development
- Brain-penetrant small molecules
- Extended duration of action
- siRNA targeting ASIC1
- CRISPR-based editing
- Viral vector delivery
Combination Strategies
Future ALS treatment likely involves multi-target approaches:
Rationale:
- Multiple pathogenic mechanisms
- Synergistic effects possible
- Prevent resistance development
- ASIC inhibition + glutamate modulation
- Antioxidants + ASIC blockers
- Gene-specific + symptomatic therapy
Conclusion
The amiloride ALS trial represents an important example of drug repurposing for neurodegenerative diseases. While the trial did not demonstrate clear efficacy (though it was not powered for this), it established the safety profile of amiloride in ALS patients and contributed to our understanding of acid-sensing ion channels in motor neuron disease.
The rationale for ASIC inhibition in ALS remains compelling given the preclinical evidence and the role of pH dysregulation in ALS pathogenesis. Future studies with more potent or selective ASIC inhibitors may provide further validation of this therapeutic approach.
Related Pages
- [Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis](/diseases/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis)
- [ALS Treatment Pipeline](/therapeutics/als-treatment-pipeline)
- [Riluzole ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/riluzole-als)
- [Excitotoxicity Mechanisms](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity-als)
- [Motor Neuron Biology](/cell-types/motor-neurons)
- [Ion Channel Dysfunction](/mechanisms/ion-channel-dysfunction)
- [Tofersen SOD1 ASO](/clinical-trials/tofersen-als)
- [Edaravone ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/edaravone-als)
- [AMX0035 Relyvrio](/clinical-trials/amx0035-als)
Competitive Landscape: ALS Drug Development
Approved Disease-Modifying Therapies
The ALS therapeutic landscape has evolved significantly[@thompson2023]:
Riluzole (Rilutek):
- First FDA-approved disease-modifying therapy (1995)
- Reduces glutamate excitotoxicity
- Extends survival by 2-3 months
- Standard of care background therapy
- Antioxidant mechanism
- Approved based on slower functional decline
- Requires intravenous infusion
- 10-day initial cycle with maintenance cycles
- First gene-specific therapy for SOD1 ALS
- Antisense oligonucleotide targeting SOD1
- Demonstrated biomarker reduction
- Significant clinical benefit in fast progressors
- Combination of sodium phenylbutyrate and taurursodiol
- Mitochondrial dysfunction and ER stress targets
- Demonstrated survival benefit
- Oral formulation
Drugs in Development
| Drug | Mechanism | Phase | Company |
|------|-----------|-------|---------|
| BIIB105 | ATXN2 ASO | Phase 3 | Biogen |
| CNM-Au8 | Catalase | Phase 2/3 | Clene |
| Pridopidine | D2 modulator | Phase 2 | Prilenia |
| Talmavirsen | C9orf72 ASO | Phase 1 | Wave Life Sciences |
| Apicidin | HDAC | Phase 2 | A Cause |
ASIC Inhibitors Beyond Amiloride
The ASIC targeting field continues to evolve:
Mambalgins:
- Peptide toxins from snake venom
- Potent ASIC1a inhibition
- Research stage only
- Small molecule ASIC1a inhibitor
- Preclinical proof of concept
- Not in clinical development
- Some non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- Weak ASIC inhibition
- Not specific for ALS
Mechanistic Insights: pH and Neurodegeneration
Extracellular pH in the CNS
Normal brain extracellular pH is maintained at approximately 7.3 through multiple mechanisms:
Physiological Regulation:
- Astrocyte buffering
- Blood-brain barrier transport
- Cerebral blood flow regulation
- Neuronal metabolic activity
- Increased glycolytic activity
- Lactic acidosis from hypoxia
- Inflammatory cell metabolism
- Mitochondrial dysfunction
pH-Dependent Pathological Processes
Acidosis promotes neurodegeneration through multiple pathways:
ASIC Activation:
- Direct calcium influx
- Membrane depolarization
- Apoptotic pathway activation
- pH affects protein folding
- Aggregation kinetics modulated
- Clearance mechanisms impaired
- Enzyme activity pH-sensitive
- Proton gradient disruption
- ATP production reduced
Therapeutic Implications
Understanding pH dysregulation suggests therapeutic approaches:
Buffering Strategies:
- Dietary alkaline supplementation
- Sodium bicarbonate administration
- Investigational approaches
- Selective inhibitors
- Genetic approaches
- Antibody-based blockade
Clinical Trial Design Lessons
ALS Clinical Trial Considerations
The amiloride trial provides insights for future ALS studies:
Endpoint Selection:
- ALSFRS-R is standard but shows variability
- Survival remains gold standard
- Composite endpoints under development
- Biomarker endpoints increasingly used
- Disease duration affects treatment response
- Genotype can define subgroups
- Bulbar vs limb onset differences
- Respiratory function baseline
- 12 months may be insufficient
- Longer trials improve signal detection
- Open-label extensions valuable
- Natural history data collection
Biomarker Integration
Modern ALS trials incorporate multiple biomarkers:
Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL):
- Blood and CSF marker
- Correlates with disease progression
- Response to treatment effects
- SOD1, C9orf72, FUS genotyping
- Predictive for disease course
- Trial enrichment possible
- MRI for cortical thinning
- PET for neuroinflammation
- Emerging techniques
Future Directions for ASIC Targeting
Preclinical Pipeline
Ongoing research continues to validate ASIC as a target:
Novel Compounds:
- More selective inhibitors in development
- Brain-penetrant small molecules
- Extended duration of action
- siRNA targeting ASIC1
- CRISPR-based editing
- Viral vector delivery
Combination Strategies
Future ALS treatment likely involves multi-target approaches:
Rationale:
- Multiple pathogenic mechanisms
- Synergistic effects possible
- Prevent resistance development
- ASIC inhibition + glutamate modulation
- Antioxidants + ASIC blockers
- Gene-specific + symptomatic therapy
Conclusion
The amiloride ALS trial represents an important example of drug repurposing for neurodegenerative diseases. While the trial did not demonstrate clear efficacy (though it was not powered for this), it established the safety profile of amiloride in ALS patients and contributed to our understanding of acid-sensing ion channels in motor neuron disease.
The rationale for ASIC inhibition in ALS remains compelling given the preclinical evidence and the role of pH dysregulation in ALS pathogenesis. Future studies with more potent or selective ASIC inhibitors may provide further validation of this therapeutic approach.
Related Pages
- [Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis](/diseases/amyotrophic-lateral-sclerosis)
- [ALS Treatment Pipeline](/therapeutics/als-treatment-pipeline)
- [Riluzole ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/riluzole-als)
- [Excitotoxicity Mechanisms](/mechanisms/excitotoxicity-als)
- [Motor Neuron Biology](/cell-types/motor-neurons)
- [Ion Channel Dysfunction](/mechanisms/ion-channel-dysfunction)
- [Tofersen SOD1 ASO](/clinical-trials/tofersen-als)
- [Edaravone ALS Trial](/clinical-trials/edaravone-als)
- [AMX0035 Relyvrio](/clinical-trials/amx0035-als)
Competitive Landscape: ALS Drug Development
Approved Disease-Modifying Therapies
The ALS therapeutic landscape has evolved significantly:
Riluzole (Rilutek):
- First FDA-approved disease-modifying therapy (1995)
- Reduces glutamate excitotoxicity
- Extends survival by 2-3 months
- Standard of care background therapy
- Antioxidant mechanism
- Approved based on slower functional decline
- Requires intravenous infusion
- First gene-specific therapy for SOD1 ALS
- Antisense oligonucleotide targeting SOD1
- Combination of sodium phenylbutyrate and taurursodiol
References
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows key molecular relationships for amiloride-als based on knowledge graph edges:
See Also
Related Hypotheses:
- [Tau-Independent Microtubule Stabilization via MAP6 Enhancement](/hypotheses/h-e12109e3)
- [Microglial subtypes in neurodegeneration — friend vs foe](/analysis/SDA-2026-04-02-gap-microglial-subtypes-20260402004119)
- [TDP-43 phase separation therapeutics for ALS-FTD](/analysis/SDA-2026-04-01-gap-006)
- [RNA binding protein dysregulation across ALS FTD and AD](/analysis/SDA-2026-04-01-gap-v2-68d9c9c1)
- [Oligodendrocyte-Myelin Dysfunction Validation in Parkinson's Disease](/experiment/exp-wiki-experiments-oligodendrocyte-myelin-dysfunction-parkinsons)
- [Neural Oscillation Dysfunction Validation in Parkinson's Disease](/experiment/exp-wiki-experiments-neural-oscillation-dysfunction-parkinsons)
- [Proteasome-Ubiquitin System Dysfunction Validation in Parkinson's Disease](/experiment/exp-wiki-experiments-proteasome-ubiquitin-system-dysfunction-parkinso)
Related Hypotheses
From the [SciDEX Exchange](/exchange) — scored by multi-agent debate
- [Stress Granule Phase Separation Modulators](/hypothesis/h-97aa8486) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.71</span> · Target: G3BP1
- [Heat Shock Protein 70 Disaggregase Amplification](/hypothesis/h-5dbfd3aa) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.71</span> · Target: HSPA1A
- [PARP1 Inhibition Therapy](/hypothesis/h-69919c49) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.67</span> · Target: PARP1
- [Cryptic Exon Silencing Restoration](/hypothesis/h-4fabd9ce) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.66</span> · Target: TARDBP
- [Arginine Methylation Enhancement Therapy](/hypothesis/h-19003961) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.65</span> · Target: PRMT1
- [Cross-Seeding Prevention Strategy](/hypothesis/h-eea667a9) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.65</span> · Target: TARDBP
- [RNA Granule Nucleation Site Modulation](/hypothesis/h-fffd1a74) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.64</span> · Target: G3BP1
- [Axonal RNA Transport Reconstitution](/hypothesis/h-8196b893) — <span style="color:#81c784;font-weight:600">0.63</span> · Target: HNRNPA2B1
Related Analyses:
- [TDP-43 phase separation therapeutics for ALS-FTD](/analysis/SDA-2026-04-01-gap-006) 🔄
- [RNA binding protein dysregulation across ALS FTD and AD](/analysis/SDA-2026-04-01-gap-v2-68d9c9c1) 🔄
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving amiloride-als discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
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| kg_node_id | None |
| entity_type | clinical_trial |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-1ebca8522206 |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'clinical-trials-amiloride-als'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
No provenance edges found
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