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January 30, 2004
Viral Gene Transfer Not Only Way,
MDA Researcher Says
Gene therapy — the insertion of functional versions
of genes (DNA) to treat disease — often relies on the use of viruses
to carry genes into the targeted cells.
While MDA continues to provide extensive support for viral delivery
of therapeutic genes to treat genetic disorders, the Association isn’t
ignoring other approaches.
MDA grantee Jon Wolff of the Department of Pediatrics at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison says there are alternatives to viral transfer
of DNA that may be safer and just as effective.
This week on WGN in Chicago, Wolff described his plans for using his
“naked” (not encased in a virus) DNA transfer technique
to get needed genes into the muscle cells of boys with Duchenne
muscular dystrophy (DMD).
The gene that’s needed in DMD is one that leads to production
of dystrophin, a protein that keeps muscle cells from tearing as they
contract and relax.
In June, the French muscle disease association (Association Francaise
Contre les Myopathies) announced that its grantees had safely injected
naked dystrophin genes into the arm muscles of 15 boys with DMD or the
related Becker MD (BMD). (See “French
Gene Transfer.")
In doing so, the French group used technology developed in Wolff’s
MDA-supported laboratory in Wisconsin.
Now, Wolff says, he wants to take his approach to the next level —
using it in a human trial to deliver dystrophin genes to whole limbs
by injecting them under pressure into the blood vessels instead of directly
into muscles.
Wolff hopes to convince regulatory agencies of the soundness of his
methods, which include putting each gene into a ring of supporting DNA
(a plasmid) before injecting it into the body, then using a blood pressure
cuff as a kind of tourniquet to increase injection pressure.
“The animal experiments look pretty promising,” Wolff says.
“The human trials are in the planning stage.”
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