Research Updates
Unique FSHD Mechanism May Open Treatment Doors
In an MDA-funded study, scientists have determined that facioscapulohumeral
muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is caused by a unique mechanism, never before
seen in any human disease.
The new study finds that, unlike most forms of muscular dystrophy, FSHD isn't
caused by a mutation (error) in a single gene, but by a mutation that triggers
the uncontrolled activity of several neighboring genes.
The study, published in the Aug. 9 issue of Cell, "offers new hints for FSHD
treatment. It might be possible to design therapies that control the
[overactive] genes," lead author Rossella Tupler said.
|
| Under normal circumstances, proteins called transcriptional repressors
keep certain chromosome 4 genes inactive, or "turned off."
In FSHD, a shortened D4Z4 region on chromosome 4 doesn't allow the
repressors to "land" on the chromosome, so the usually
inactive genes mistakenly become active, or "turned on." |
By 1992, scientists had traced the cause of FSHD to a deletion (a missing piece
of DNA) near the end of chromosome 4, in a region that contains repeated blocks
of DNA, called D4Z4. Normally, this part of chromosome 4 contains tens to
hundreds of D4Z4 repeats, but in people with FSHD, it contains fewer than 10.
Scientists searched for defective genes in the D4Z4 region that might cause
FSHD, but found none. Tupler, an Italian scientist who holds appointmentsat the
Università degli Studi di Pavia in Italy and the University of Massachusetts
Medical School in Worcester, discovered that the D4Z4 region actually represses
the activity of genes nearby, and when it's missing — as in FSHD — those genes
run amok.
In "a novel research strategy," Tupler's team examined muscle biopsies from
people with and without FSHD. They found that in FSHD, at least three genes
close to D4Z4 are inappropriately "turned on."
Next, they identified a piece of D4Z4 that acts as a docking site for transcriptional
repressors — proteins that attach to DNA and turn off genes. Finally,
they showed that by experimentally blocking the repressors in non-FSHD cells,
they could reproduce the abnormal gene activity seen in FSHD.
One of the genes turned on in FSHD is ANT1, which is mutated in a form of progressive
external ophthalmoplegia (PEO), a disease that weakens muscles around
the eyes. Tupler suspects that overactivity of this gene could play a major
role in FSHD, which causes weakness mostly in the face, shoulders and upper
arms. Overall, "our discovery is a breakthrough toward a complete understanding
of FSHD, and opens broad avenues for future research," Tupler said.
Blocking Myostatin Could Be Effective in DMD
In July, at the 10th International Congress on Neuromuscular Diseases in
Vancouver (sponsored in part by MDA) two research teams showed that blocking
the action of myostatin — a secreted protein that inhibits muscle growth —
might be an effective way to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and
other muscle-wasting diseases.
One group, led by Kathryn Wagner at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, bred
mice lacking myostatin to mice with DMD. The offspring had significantly
larger, stronger muscles than DMD mice with intact myostatin, and had less
evidence of fibrosis — the replacement of muscle by fat and connective tissue.
In a second study, Tejvir Khurana and his group at the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia found they could protect mice against DMD by
giving them injections of a protein that blocks myostatin function. The protein
is an antibody specially manufactured to target myostatin.
When young mice with DMD were given twice-weekly injections of the antibody,
their respiratory muscles showed reduced signs of degeneration compared to
those of untreated mice. The treated mice were also larger and stronger, and
had lower blood levels of creatine kinase (CK), a protein that leaks out of
damaged muscle into the bloodstream.
Wyeth, a biotechnology company based in Collegeville, Pa., developed the
anti-myostatin antibodies used in the study by injecting myostatin into
myostatin-negative mice and filtering their blood. The company tentatively
plans to test the antibodies against age-related muscle wasting and several
muscle-wasting diseases, including other forms of muscular dystrophy and
diabetes, a Wyeth spokesperson said. But it's likely that human-derived
antibodies will be required for clinical use.
Mouse Studies Encourage DMD Gene Therapy Search
|
| Xiao Xiao |
MDA grantee Xiao Xiao in the Depart-ment of Genetics and Biochemistry at the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine was on a team that recently
demonstrated that gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) using
highly miniaturized dystrophin genes tucked inside a small virus will likely be
feasible.
In a paper published in the Aug. 10 issue of Human Gene Therapy, the team found
that delivering miniaturized genes for the dystrophin protein, which is missing
in DMD, to the leg muscles of mice with the disease, significantly improved the
ability of the muscles to generate force and resist contraction-induced damage
of the type seen in DMD.
The investigators delivered to the muscles miniaturized dystrophin genes tucked
inside adeno-associated viral vectors (transporters). These vectors have
demonstrated safety and effectiveness in delivering genes to muscle in previous
studies, but their small size makes it necessary to shrink the large dystrophin
gene to fit it inside them.
The investigators found that the miniaturized dystrophin gene was still
effective in improving muscle function, despite the reduced size of the protein
that's made from its instructions.
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| Jeffrey Chamberlain |
MDA grantee Jeffrey Chamberlain, in the Department of Neurology atthe University
of Washington Schoolof Medicine in Seattle, published somewhat similar
experimental results in the March issue of Nature Medicine (see "Research
Updates," April-May 2002). Chamberlain's team found that, when mice with DMD
received three types of highly miniaturized dystrophin genes (microdystrophins)
tucked inside adeno-associated viral vectors, their leg muscles took on a more
normal microscopic appearance. Two of the microdystrophins reversed the signs
of muscular dystrophy in the leg muscles, while the third slowed the disease
process.
Chamberlain's group didn't address muscle function in the mice treated with the
transferred genes but did address it in mice bred with various miniaturized
dystrophin genes (transgenic mice). In many of these mice, muscle force
generation and injury resistance were better than in untreated mice with DMD,
and all were able to run significantly farther on a treadmill than the
untreated mice.
Chamberlain's team tested several types of miniaturized genes and found some
worked better than others.
Viruses Seen as Factor in DMD, BMD Heart Damage
Viruses may be a major contributor to the type of heart problem seen in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD and BMD), say investigators at the
University of California at San Diego.
In a paper published in the August issue of Nature Medicine, Dingding Xiong and
colleagues show that a lack of dystrophin, the protein that's absent or
disrupted in DMD and BMD, makes the heart more susceptible to infection with at
least some viruses, particularly the coxsackie virus. They conclude that, while
there are probably a number of mechanisms by which dystrophin deficiency leads
to destruction of the heart muscle — a problem known as cardiomyopathy —
their data support the idea that dystrophin deficiency increases susceptibility
to virally induced heart muscle damage. (For more on cardiomyopathy in DMD and
BMD, see "The Heart Is a Muscle Too,"
Quest, vol. 6, no. 2, 1999.)
Common Link Found for MDs Involving Retardation
Certain forms of muscular dystrophy are associated with mental
retardation, but the reason for this pairing has been elusive.
In two new studies, scientists funded by MDA have found evidence that a protein
called alpha-dystroglycan is at the root of both the muscle and brain
abnormalities in these diseases. The finding has implications for treating some
forms of MD and mental retardation, whether they occur together or alone.
|
| Kevin Campbell |
"As we build a case for alpha-dystroglycan being a major player in these
diseases, it allows us to think about global therapeutic strategies that could
work for all of them," said lead scientist Kevin Campbell, an investigator at
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a professor in the Departments of
Physiology and Biophysics, and Neurology, at the University of Iowa in Iowa
City.
Some forms of congenital (infantile-onset) MD — Fukuyama CMD, muscle-eye-brain
disease (MEB) and Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) — are strongly
associated with severe mental retardation. Duchenne muscular dystrophy is
often associated with learning disabilities.
Based on recent evidence that FCMD and MEB are caused by defects in
glycosylation (the process of adding sugars ontoproteins), Campbell and his
team examined alpha-dystroglycanin muscle biopsies from children with these
diseases. They found that most of the alpha-dystroglycan didn't have its normal
sugar components and therefore wasn't able to interact with other proteins
found in brain and muscle. An animal model of CMD, the myodystrophy mouse, also
lacked the normal form of alpha-dystroglycan, and had brain abnormalities
reminiscent of FCMD, MEB and WWS.
In a second study, Campbell and his team deleted the dystroglycan gene in the
brains of otherwise normal mice. Those mice also developed brain abnormalities
similar to those seen in FCMD, MEBand WWS. The two studies appeared
back-to-back in the July 25 issue of Nature.
Campbell said the findings also could have implications for DMD, but that more
research needs to be done. "We're going to see if we can make a stronger case
for an involvement of alpha-dystroglycan in the Duchenne learning
abnormalities," he said.
He also cited evidence that alpha-dystroglycan might play a role in some forms
of mental retardation not tied to muscular dystrophy. In a study last year, his
group showed that alpha-dystroglycan serves as a binding site for LCMV, a virus
that can trigger brain abnormalities during fetal development.
Campbell and his group are developing gene therapy tools that could be used to
treat CMDs. "It's still early, but our results present a new set of therapeutic
strategies that can be pursued in the laboratory," he said.
Potent Stem Cells Found in Bone Marrow
A new study, published online by Nature on June 23, strengthens the possibility
of using bone marrow-derived stem cells to treat neuromuscular diseases.
Catherine Verfaillie and colleagues at the University of Minnesota in
Minneapolis isolated stem cells from the bone marrow of adult rodents, and
found some with remarkable similarity to embryonic stem cells. The cells —
called multipotent adult progenitor cells, or MAPCs — can divide for
many generations in a culture dish, and with some coaxing, they can produce
many cell types, including nerve and muscle.
Moreover, when just one MAPC is implanted into an early rodent embryo, it can
give rise to progeny in tissues and organs throughout the adult animal,
in-cluding brain and muscle.
However, when Verfaillie and her group gave adult rodents intravenous injections
of MAPCs, the cells only contributed to blood and other tissues that are
rapidly turned over — not to muscle or brain. Further research will determine
whether MAPCs can home in on and repair muscle or brain tissue that's been
damaged by disease.
Muscle Stem Cells Help Mice With DMD
MDA grantee Johnny Huard, a cell biologist at the University of Pittsburgh, was
on a team that recently isolated a new type of stem cells from the muscles of
healthy mice and transplanted them into mdx mice, which have Duchenne muscular
dystrophy (DMD). The findings are published in the May 27 issue of the
Journal of Cell Biology.
|
| Johnny Huard |
The newly isolated cells have the ability to turn into muscle, nerve or
endothelial cells (which line the blood and lymph vessels and some body
cavities). When the cells were transplanted into mdx mice, numerous muscle
fibers containing the dystrophin protein, missing in those with DMD and in mdx
mice, appeared.
The results suggest that some of the previous obstacles encountered with muscle
cell transplantation — low survival rate of the transplanted cells, poor
spreading of the cells and rejection of the cells by the immune system — might
be overcome by using this new type of cell, assuming that such cells have
parallels in the human body.
Parents Favor Screening Infants for DMD, Study Says
Carol Hoffman, a graduate student in genetic counseling at Brandeis University
in Waltham, Mass., recently conducted a survey of parents of children with Duchenne
muscular dystrophy (DMD) and found that a large majority favor
screening infants at birth for potential early diagnosis of DMD.
Ninety-three parents were included in the final analysis. The survey results
showed:
- The average age of diagnosis for DMD in the United States was 4 years, 5
months. A delay in diagnosis most often occurred when children came to medical
professionals as infants or toddlers or when primary care physicians initially
took no action.
- 86 (92.4 percent) of respondents were in favor of some form of infant
screening; 59 (63.4 percent) thought screening should be voluntary, while 27
(29 percent) thought it should be mandatory. One person thought infant
screening for DMD shouldn't be performed at all, and six people had no opinion.
- If screening were to be implemented in the United States, the program should
probably be voluntary, emphasizing parental choice and informed consent.
- Any screening program should involve an integrated team of health professionals
to provide continuing education and support for families.
- Early diagnosis can have negative consequences (e.g., loss of "not knowing,"
prolonged distress, etc.). Parents who choose to undergo infant screening
should be made aware of these potential effects before embarking on the
testing.
- Infant screening can't alleviate the distress and frustration associated with
lack of sensitivity, psychosocial support, resources or communication parents
may encounter, or the shock and trauma of receiving the diagnosis.
Prednisone Might Work Against Congenital MD
Prednisone, a steroid drug with anti-inflammatory effects, is often prescribed
to slow the course of Duchenne MD. A new MDA-funded study suggests that it and
other anti-inflammatories also might work against the most common form of
congenital muscular dystrophy, merosin-negative CMD.
Merosin-negative CMD, which results from a deficiency of the protein merosin
(also called laminin-alpha-2), causes slowly progressive muscle weakness and
wasting, often noticeable at birth. There's evidence that inflammation plays a
role in the disease.
Prednisone and other corticosteroids suppress inflammation by acting directly on
blood-borne immune cells, and by blocking complement — a set of proteins in the
blood that stimulates the activity of immune cells. More specific complement
inhibitor drugs are under development.
In the new study, Anne Connolly and her colleagues at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis tested the effects of prednisone and complement
inhibition on mice with merosin-negative CMD. She found that mice lacking the
gene for C3, a complement protein, lived longer than those with normal C3. When
treated with prednisolone (a liquid form of prednisone), these mice showed even
greater increases in survival and strength.
"I consider this encouraging news, but it would take a clinical trial to see if
[these drugs] are effective for children with CMD," Connolly said of the study,
published in June in the Journal of Neuroimmunology.
Investigators Studying Neuromuscular Disease With
Bone Disease
Investigators Virginia Kimonis and Giles Watts at Harvard University Med-ical
School in Boston are seeking families with a history of neuromuscular disease combined with inclusion bodies and Paget disease of bone.
Inclusion bodies are cellular abnormalities that can be detected in a muscle
biopsy; Paget disease is associated with pain in the bones and characteristic
X-ray findings.
The team has identified five large families with this combination of symptoms,
which doesn't yet have a specific disease name. About one-third of the family
members also exhibit frontotemporal dementia, which involves language deficits,
personality changes and other cognitive problems.
The group has found a region on chromosome 9 that may hold the gene underlying
this complex disease. More families are needed to pin down the specific gene
involved.
The disease may have been diagnosed as limb-girdle or facioscapulohumeral
muscular dystrophy, inclusion-body myopathy or ALS-like disease.
If you've received a diagnosis of, or have a family history of, a muscle disease
with inclusion bodies and have Paget disease of bone, the researchers would
like to hear from you and will travel to your home. The only invasive procedure
is a blood test.
For information, contact Kimonis or Watts at (617) 355-4697, (617) 355-7748 or virginia.kimonis@tch.harvard.edu.
Albuterol in DMD Under Study at UCLA
MDA grantee Melissa Spencer at the University of California at Los Angeles and
colleagues are studying the drug albuterol in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD).
Albuterol, which is usually used to dilate lung passages in respiratory
diseases, may increase muscle mass and strength. When used for muscle disease,
the drug is given orally in a slow-release tablet.
Researchers believe albuterol may interfere with the actions of calpain, a
protein that could play a role in muscle destruction.
A preliminary trial of albuterol in 10 boys with DMD found a significant
increase in average strength. The re-searchers are now conducting a
double-blind study with 25 to 30 boys with DMD.
"In our initial study we had very few side effects in the patients," Spencer
said. "Our hope is that albuterol treatment will become a component of an
armamentarium of drugs that together will reduce the progression of DMD until a
permanent cure is identified."
Eight visits to UCLA over the course of nine months will be required. The boys
will undergo DEXA scans, low-dose X-rays that measure lean body mass (bone and
muscle density).
For information, contact Linda De Sepulveda at (310)825-9816 or lbdesepu@ucla.edu; or Melissa Spencer at (310) 794-5225 or
mspencer@mednet.ucla.edu. For more information, go to www.physci.ucla.edu/DMD/albuterol.html.
Hearing Found Normal in Adults With FSHD
A new study by Mark Rogers and colleagues at University Hospital of Wales in
Cardiff overturns earlier reports that have suggested hearing loss may be part
of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD).
The study, published in the May issue of Neuromuscular Disorders, examined 21
people with adult-onset FSHD and compared the results with data obtained from a
British National Study of Hearing, which covered the general population.
Much to the investigators' surprise, hearing in those with adult-onset FSHD was
actually better than that of the general population, although the
differences were statistically significant only on some measures.
The authors suggest that hearing impairment may be an important component of
infantile- or childhood-onset FSHD but that it appears not to be part of
adult-onset FSHD. They caution that their numbers are small and that further
studies on larger populations need to be performed to verify their findings.
Chemicals Boost Utrophin, Slow Wasting in Mice With
Duchenne MD
In experiments on mice, scientists funded by MDA have identified two chemicals
that can partially compensate for the loss of dystrophin, the protein missing
in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Both chemicals appear to work by
boosting the production of dystrophin's sister protein utrophin.
Two groups presented the findings in July at the 10th International Congress on
Neuromuscular Diseases in Vancouver, partly sponsored by MDA.
One group, led by Sabine de la Porte of the Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique in Gif-sur-Yvette, France, found that the small compound L-arginine can increase utrophin levels in mice with DMD. Another group, led by Tejvir
Khurana at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, found that a small
protein called heregulin has a similar effect.
When injected into the abdominal cavities of mice with DMD, each chemical partly
protected against the muscle wasting associated with the disease.
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Scientists have been searching for ways to stimulate the production of utrophin
since its discovery in 1989. De la Porte decided to investigate L-arginine
because it's a source of "fuel" for nitric oxide synthase (NOS), a protein that
generates the small signaling compound nitric oxide and is closely linked to
utrophin at the muscle membrane.
After several months of L-arginine, given once daily for five days a week, the
limb and respiratory muscles of mice showed fewer signs of degeneration, and
their respiratory muscles showed improved strength, compared to those of
untreated mice. Treated mice also had lower blood levels of creatine kinase, a
protein that leaks out of damaged muscle cells.
During years spent studying the gene that encodes utrophin, Khurana and his
group learned the gene could be "turned on" by heregulin, a protein that nerves
release to stimulate muscle development. The limb muscles of DMD mice that were
given twice-weekly heregulin injections over a three-month period showed less
degeneration and improved resistance to contraction-induced damage compared to
those of untreated mice.
It's not yet clear if L-arginine or heregulin will be useful in children with
DMD. De la Porte acknowledged that because nitric oxide controls many processes
in the body, including blood vessel dilation and cell metabolism, L-arginine
becomes toxic with increasing dosage. The potential toxicity of heregulin at
high doses hasn't yet been addressed.
It's also unclear whether either of these proteins could "upregulate" or
increase utrophin levels to the extent necessary to protect muscles completely
against DMD. |