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RESEARCHERS PINPOINT PATHWAY
INVOLVED IN MUSCLE REGENERATION
A team including MDA grantee Gordon Lynch in the Department of
Physiology at the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia,
found that a biological signaling pathway may help explain why
mice with Duchenne
muscular dystrophy (DMD) can regenerate their muscles much
better than can humans with the same disease. It seems that, in
mice, the biochemical pathway under the control of the protein
calcineurin may be more effective than in humans.
When the investigators blocked calcineurin signaling in DMD-affected
mice with the drug cyclosporine, the mice experienced muscle degeneration
much more like that seen in human patients. The cyclosporine-treated
mice showed much more severe muscle loss than did DMD-affected
mice not treated with it.
The investigators, who published their paper online Jan. 16 in
Acta Neuropathologica, suggest that enhancing calcineurin signaling
or its downstream effects could be a treatment approach in DMD.
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