MDA RESEARCHES UNRAVEL
KEY MECHANISM IN COMPLEX DYSTROPHY
TUCSON, Ariz., Dec. 4, 2003 — A physician-investigator
at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
in Boston has uncovered a unique molecular mechanism that may help
explain why myotonic
muscular dystrophy, the most common form of muscular dystrophy
in adults, is such a complex disease.
The work of Richard Junghans was funded by the Muscular Dystrophy Association.
The finding, which shows how several proteins can be affected by a
single genetic flaw, is in today’s issue of Science Express,
an online edition of the journal Science. Junghans was assisted by
postdoctoral researcher Alexander Ebralidze and others.
“
This new understanding of myotonic dystrophy really demonstrates how
far we’ve come from the old idea of ‘one gene, one protein,
one disease,’ and as our understanding grows, so does our arsenal
of treatment possibilities,” Junghans said.
Myotonic dystrophy, which affects some 38,000 people
in the United States, causes muscle weakness, myotonia (difficulty
relaxing muscles),
premature balding, cataracts, digestive and gynecological abnormalities,
heartbeat irregularities, and mild to moderate brain dysfunction. The
disease varies in severity.
In 1992, MDA grantees were part of a multinational team
that found that the underlying genetic defect in myotonic dystrophy
is an abnormally
large section of DNA on chromosome 19, which further expands as it’s
passed from parent to child. In general, larger DNA expansions are
correlated with earlier disease onset and more severe disease, so the
disorder tends to worsen with each generation.
Junghans’ group has found that the mutated RNA
in affected cells sticks to transcription factors, proteins the cell
needs to make other
proteins. The transcription factors allow the cell to read the genetic
instructions in the DNA, convert these instructions to an RNA template,
and then manufacture cellular proteins.
When the researchers added a transcription factor to
the myotonic dystrophy-affected cells, the level of a specific protein
they measured was restored to
normal.
Junghans said that this is the first time that any abnormal
RNA has been shown to stick to transcription factors and inhibit the
normal
process for manufacturing cell proteins.
The investigators also note that the same mechanism
of transcription factor interference likely operates in a second form
of myotonic
dystrophy that was identified by MDA researchers in 2001. This
form, type 2 myotonic
dystrophy, stems from an elongated stretch of DNA on chromosome 3.
“
There’s a unifying appeal to this discovery, if it ultimately
proves to be the primary mechanism of the disease,” Junghans
said. “Most genetic diseases are defined by a defect in a particular
protein. In the myotonic dystrophies, however, it’s been very
hard to track down the protein defects that cause the multitude of
abnormalities.
“
When we know better which affected transcription factors are most critical,
gene therapy may be possible to give extra transcription factors. This
could restore proper synthesis for many proteins at once, and, one
hopes, restore the health of the muscle or other tissue.”
MDA is a voluntary health agency working to defeat more than 40 neuromuscular
diseases, including the muscular dystrophies, through programs of worldwide
research, comprehensive services, and far-reaching professional and
public health education.
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