Pompes Disease Trials Expanded
to 3 More U.S. Centers
With encouraging results from small pilot
trials, the biotech company Genzyme is recruiting participants for a
large, multicenter trial to further evaluate an experimental treatment
for Pompes disease,
also known as acid maltase deficiency.
The disease is caused by genetic defects
in the enzyme acid maltase, also called acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA).
The enzyme normally breaks down glycogen (stored sugar) in muscle cells,
and without it, glycogen accumulates in cellular compartments called
lysosomes. The most severe form of the disease causes cardiac and skeletal
muscle weakness in infancy, and is often fatal within the first year
of life.
In two pilot trials, 11 babies with Pompes
have received enzyme replacement therapy, and some are now healthy,
walking toddlers (see "Pompes
Disease," March-April). The therapy involves intravenous infusions of GAA.
In March, Genzyme, of Cambridge, Mass.,
announced that it was launching a third, larger trial, to include up
to 16 babies between ages 6 months and 3 years. That trial is recruiting
participants through Duke University in Durham, N.C., the University
of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville, Childrens
Hospital Medical Center in Cincinnati, and two sites in England and
France (For more information, visit www.mda.org/research/ctrials.aspx.)
MDA has offered to provide up to $50,000
to each U.S. center in order to help trial participants cover expenses
for physical, speech and respiratory therapy, social services, and nutritional
consultations. Most participants will need these services during the
several trial period and are likely to be outside of their health insurance
coverage areas.
In February, MDA Director of Research
Development Sharon Hesterlee met with Genzyme officials to lay the groundwork
for a natural history study of late-onset Pompes
disease, which causes skeletal muscle weakness but no cardiac problems.
This study would be a step toward designing trials of enzyme replacement
therapy in children and adults with Pompes.
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Andy
Amalfitano
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Meanwhile, MDA grantee Andy Amalfitano
at Duke is making progress toward gene therapy for the disease. Injections
of the GAA gene might be required just once or twice a year, compared
to the two to eight times per month now required for injections of the
GAA protein, he says.
In experiments on mice with Pompes,
he showed that a virus carrying the GAA gene can be targeted to the
liver, which then releases the protein into the bloodstream, restoring
GAA activity to muscles for up to six months.
His latest study, published online by
the Journal of Gene Medicine in December, showed that the same approach
could be used to restore GAA activity for at least 28 days in the muscles
of quail with Pompes. The quail model
provided validation for the enzyme replacement therapy.
New Tests Detect More
Dystrophin Gene Flaws
The large size and complexity of the dystrophin
gene, which carries instructions for a muscle protein and is flawed
in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD and BMD),
has made dystrophin genetic testing particularly challenging.
Now, MDA-supported researchers have developed
tests that can detect a much higher percentage of dystrophin mutations,
including some very minor DNA changes.
Most commercially available tests can
detect only the type of mutation in which large pieces of the gene are
absent. This "deletion analysis" testing is positive for only about 60 percent of people with DMD.
Knowing the precise genetic flaw in a
person with DMD can help a family predict the risk of passing the disease
to children, qualify for certain research studies, and eventually perhaps
to predict the severity of the disease or suggest specific treatments.
Carolyn Sue Richards, a molecular biologist
and MDA grantee at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, is working
on a type of dystrophin gene analysis based on the "denaturing
high performance liquid chromatography" (DHPLC) technique.
Richards group wants to test the technique on at least 100 people with a clinical
(symptom-based) diagnosis of DMD or BMD, a muscle biopsy result suggesting
these conditions, and negative results on a dystrophin gene deletion
test.
For information on getting into this study,
which includes test results for the family and doesnt
require travel to Houston, contact Madhuri Hegde or Patricia Ward at
the Baylor Diagnostic Sequencing Laboratory at (800) 411-GENE, (713)
798-5722 or dsl@bcm. tmc.edu.
Kevin Flanigan, an MDA grantee at the
Eccles Institute of Human Genetics at the University of Utah in Salt
Lake City, was among those who recently developed another approach to
improved dystrophin gene testing. MDA clinic co-director Jerry Mendell,
at Ohio State University in Columbus, provided patient DNA samples used
to evaluate the new, more accurate procedures.
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Kevin
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The researchers published an article in
the April issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics about their
technique, called "single condition
amplification/internal primer," or SCAIP, sequencing.
The test is expected to become available
for less than $1,000 this spring through the Human Genome Depot (www.genome.utah.edu)
at the University of Utah.
For information, call (801) 587-9540 or
e-mail kevin.flanigan@genetics.utah.edu.
Complete dystrophin gene analysis using
DOVAM, for "detection of virtually
all mutations," became available
about two years ago, with MDA support, through the City of Hope National
Medical Center in Duarte, Calif.
You can get more information at www.cityofhope.org/cmdl,
by calling (888) 826-4362, or by e-mail to cmdl@coh.org.
The cost ranges from $900 to about $1,600.
Better Understanding, Testing
in Type 2 MMD
MDA-supported researchers Laura Ranum
and John Day at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis have developed
a DNA test for myotonic dystrophy (MMD) type 2.
Ranum, Day and colleagues published their
results in the Feb. 25 issue of Neurology, along with a thorough description
of the disease.
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Laura
Ranum and John Day
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MMD2 seems to lack the severe, congenital
form of the disorder often seen in type 1 MMD, and it doesnt
seem to worsen with each generation, as does MMD1. Type 2 tends to cause
more weakness in the proximal (close to the trunk) muscles, while type
1 causes more distal (far from the trunk) muscle weakness.
In many other respects, the two diseases
are similar.
The genetic test is available through
Athena Diagnostics of Worcester, Mass. See www.athenadiagnostics.com,
or call (800) 394-4493 for details.
Destroying Excess Genetic
Material New Lead in MMD1
MDA-supported researcher Jack Puymirat
of the Human Genetics Unit of Laval University in Quebec is part of
a team thats on the trail of a new treatment
strategy for type 1 myotonic dystrophy (MMD1), a multisystem
disease that leads to muscle weakness and can also involve heart and
gastrointestinal problems and central nervous system dysfunction.
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Jack
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Using a new technique called antisense
RNA, the researchers were able to destroy at least in cells in a lab dish the abnormally long sequence of genetic material that causes MMD1. In
the disease, these long sequences are found in the DNA on chromosome
19. These are converted by the cells to correspondingly long strands
of RNA, which, many experts say, may be the root cause of the most serious
trouble in MMD1.
The researchers found that the antisense
construct blocked the abnormally long RNA. The treated MMD-affected
cells then morphed from immature, separated muscle cells to mature,
fused muscle fibers in a normal fashion; and they reacted normally to
insulin and sugar. The investigators say these activities normally wouldnt
be carried out correctly in cells with the MMD defect.
"Our data support a future role for
antisense as a new gene therapy for myotonic dystrophy," the authors say in the April 22 issue of Gene Therapy.
Antisense could theoretically be used to treat other disorders in which
excess DNA or RNA, rather than missing DNA, plays a role. Among other
MDA-supported diseases in this category are MMD2 and oculopharyngeal
MD.
New Findings Expected to Improve
CMT Diagnosis
Researchers have linked two new genes to Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease
(CMT).
There are over a dozen forms of CMT, many of them traceable to genes
that encode specific components of nerve fibers or myelin, the protective
covering around nerve fibers. The new genes, which bring the total number
of identified CMT genes to 14, appear to have more general functions.
An MDA-funded team led by Vincent Timmerman of the University of Antwerp
in Belgium has found the culprit gene behind CMT type 2B, which causes
such a severe loss of sensation that wounds to the feet often go unnoticed
and rapidly become infected. The gene, RAB7, encodes a protein that
controls the transport of nutrients and other cargo within cells; its
not clear why RAB7 defects specifically cause damage to nerve cells.
The same mystery holds for the second new CMT gene: glycyl tRNA synthetase
(GARS), which is part of the machinery that all cells use to make proteins.
A team led by Eric Green of the National Human Genome Research Institute
in Bethesda, Md., found GARS mutations in families with CMT type 2D
and the clinically similar disease spinal muscular atrophy type 5, both
of which cause pronounced weakness in the upper extremities.
Kumaraswamy Sivakumar, co-director of MDAs
clinic at St. Josephs Hospital
in Phoenix, was part of the CMT2D study, which appears in the May issue
of the American Journal of Human Genetics. Timmermans
study appeared in the journals
April issue.
If current trends continue, each newly discovered CMT gene could lead
to better diagnostic tests for the disease.
Athena Diagnostics (www.athenadiagnostics.com),
a company based in Worcester, Mass., offers a panel of tests for the
six genes most often responsible for CMT, including periaxin, linked
to the disease in early 2001.
In January, MDA grantees Valerie Street and Phillip Chance of the University
of Washington in Seattle reported that mutations in the LITAF gene cause
CMT type 1C, and now theyre working toward
a genetic test (see "Research
Updates," March-April).
Theyve put out a call for neurologists
to help them identify patients who might have CMT1C.
New Clues Found to SBMA Mechanism,
Treatment
A study in the Jan. 23 issue of Nature confirms that the accumulation
of mutant proteins is a key part of neurological diseases like spinal-bulbar
muscular atrophy (SBMA). It also describes a compound that can block
the accumulation and thus might make a good drug candidate for treating
these diseases.
In SBMA, nerve cells in the spinal cord and in the bulbar (bulblike)
part of the brainstem degenerate, causing the muscles connected to them
to grow weak and waste away.
The disease is caused by a genetic defect in the androgen receptor,
a protein that allows cells to respond to testosterone and other masculinizing
hormones. In SBMA, the receptor contains an abnormal structure called expanded polyglutamine, which causes it to stick to itself and
other proteins, creating clumps of debris called aggregates.
At least eight other neurodegenerative diseases, including Huntingtons,
are caused by similar genetic defects in other proteins. In all of these
diseases, expanded polyglutamine leads to the formation of aggregates,
but researchers have debated whether the aggregates contribute to nerve
cell death or just reflect a dying cells
inability to clear away debris.
Junying Yuan and colleagues at Harvard Medical School in Boston investigated
that question by experimenting with Congo red, a dye that attaches
itself to aggregated proteins and is often used to examine postmortem
brain tissue.
In experiments on cells containing expanded polyglutamine, they showed
that Congo red could reduce the formation of aggregates, dissolve pre-existing
aggregates and protect against cell death. Those results provide strong
evidence that aggregates cause cell death in Huntingtons,
SBMA and related diseases, Yuan says.
Other results show that compounds like Congo red might be used to treat
these diseases. When Yuan and his group gave Congo red to mice with
Huntingtons disease, the mice performed
better on movement tests and lived longer than untreated mice.
Nonviral Gene Transfer
Uses Sound Waves, Gas Bubbles
A method of gene delivery that uses microscopic gas bubbles and high-frequency
sound waves (ultrasound) to help propel DNA into cells may prove safe
and effective, investigators say.
Viruses have been the preferred delivery method for gene transfer,
but they have safety risks. Inserting DNA without viruses ("naked" DNA) has so far proved less efficient than viral delivery.
MDA grantee Terry Partridge, in the Department of Muscle Cell Biology
at Hammersmith Hospital in London, is part of a group of researchers
who recently published two papers, in the mid-January and early March
issues of Gene Therapy, on the "microbubble" with ultrasound gene transfer technique.
The microscopic bubbles are made of octa-fluoropropane gas coated with
albumin protein. As a product called Optison, the bubbles are used to
light up tissues for medical imaging. Ultrasound, used for viewing organs
and tissues, is generally considered safer than X-rays.
The new technique was apparently safe and effective in mice that received
injections into their leg muscles. The microbubbles seem to have had
a protective effect against the muscle damage often seen with gene transfer
injections.
In their March paper, the authors say, "Whatever
the mechanisms involved, the protective effect of the microbubbles is
a most exciting prospect for further exploitation in any gene delivery
system where tissue damage is a concern."
MDA grantee George Karpati at Montreal Neurological Institute has also
been studying ultrasound-enhanced delivery of DNA. MDA grantee Jon Wolff
at the University of Wisconsin is experimenting with various techniques
to deliver naked DNA.
Early Prednisone May Preserve
Strength in DMD
A trial of alternate-day administration of the anti-inflammatory drug
prednisone in very young children with Duchenne muscular dystrophy
(DMD) was recently conducted in Bologna, Italy, leading researchers
to conclude that such early prednisone may be justified in this disease.
Five boys with DMD between ages 2 and 4 began taking 1.25 milligrams
of prednisone per kilogram on alternate days, while three boys of the
same age with DMD didnt take the drug.
At the end of the study, which is in the February issue of Muscle &
Nerve, the treated boys had taken prednisone for an average of four
years and seven months. All were still able to get up from the floor,
while two of the boys who hadnt taken
the drug had lost this ability.
Children in the prednisone group also had higher muscle strength scores.
They didnt show significantly more bone
loss than those in the nonprednisone group.
Luciano Merlini at the Istituto Ortopedici Rizzoli in Bologna and colleagues
conclude that alternate-day prednisone maintained the ability to rise
from the floor in patients with DMD started on treatment before age
4 and that side effects werent worse than
those observed in children treated later in the disease.
They note, "As long-term steroid
treatment is effective in prolonging function but not in recovering
lost function, its early use seems appropriate."
Creatine Could Help in Type
2 MMD
A German study suggests that the dietary
supplement creatine may help in type 2 myotonic dystrophy (MMD2),
at least with perceived strength and endurance.
Creatine may help muscle cells produce
energy more easily.
In the study, 10 people with MMD2 received
10 grams of creatine per day for three months, while 10 others got a
similar-looking placebo.
Christiane Schneider-Gold of the University
of Wurzburg in Germany, who published these results in the Feb. 11 issue
of Neurology, found no significant improvement in the creatine group
on objective tests of muscle strength.
However, seven people who got creatine
and one person in the placebo group reported perceived improvement of
strength. The drug may also have contributed to muscle pain relief.
There were no severe side effects.
The investigators suggest that a larger
trial is warranted.
Service Dog
Benefits Under Study
Diane Collins, occupational therapist
and graduate student at the University of Pittsburgh (Pa.), is conducting
a phone and mail survey to determine whether service dogs enhance functional
independence, promote psychosocial well-being, or improve socioeconomic
status for people with disabilities. Collins will compare the status
of people who have service dogs with that of people who either arent
seeking a service dog or who are waiting for one.
For more information, contact Diane Collins
at dmcst84@pitt.edu or (412) 365-4544,
or Shirley Fitzgerald at (412) 365-4840.
MORE MDA RESEARCH NEWS |
For up-to-the-minute news on MDA research
developments, visit MDAs Web site
at www.mda.org. Click on "Research" for information on recent research developments and active clinical
trials, and links to major medical/research sites. Look at the
Web sites "Whats
New" section for news
bulletins about breaking research announcements.
For research news about amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, see The
MDA/ALS Newsletter or go to www.als-mda.org.
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