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MDA Begins First U.S. Duchenne Gene
Therapy Trial
by Margaret Wahl
The first
U.S.-based human gene therapy trial in children with Duchenne
muscular dystrophy (DMD) began in late March at
Columbus (Ohio) Children’s Hospital.
This MDA-supported trial is the culmination of years
of research funded by the Association, including a $1.6 million
grant to Asklepios BioPharmaceutical of Chapel Hill, N.C., and
additional grants to molecular geneticist Xiao Xiao at the
University of Pittsburgh and Jerry Mendell at Columbus Children’s
Research Institute. The trial will test the safety of the
procedure.
The very large gene for the muscle protein dystrophin, missing in boys with DMD, has been miniaturized
in such a way that it retains its essential functions in muscle
cells but can fit inside an apparently safe and effective transport
vehicle.
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Andrew Kilbarger of Lancaster,
Ohio, received the first injection in MDA’s gene therapy trial
for Duchenne muscular dystrophy March 28. Here Andrew, 8,
receives comfort from his mom, Julie, while Jerry Mendell
marks Andrew’s arm in preparation for the injection. Photo by
Columbus Children’s Hospital
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The vehicle, developed principally by Xiao Xiao and
R. Jude Samulski, a virologist at the University of North Carolina
and Asklepios, is an adeno-associated virus (AAV).
After being inserted into the AAV shells, the genes
are injected into the biceps or another suitable muscle in six boys
with DMD.
If the results prove the safety of the procedure,
the next step will be further tests to see if the therapy is
effective in producing dystrophin in muscle cells of boys with
Duchenne MD.
The researchers aren’t seeking additional
participants. |
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| Mouse Studies
Bode Well for Exon Skipping in DMD |
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MDA grantees Qi Long Lu at Carolinas Medical Centerin
Charlotte,N.C., and Stephen Wilton at the University of Western Australia
in Perth, were on a research team that recently achieved encouraging
results with a strategy known as exon skipping to repair the
mutated dystrophin gene in mice with a disease resembling Duchenne muscular dystrophy
(DMD).
The investigators, who announced their results in the
February issue of Nature Medicine, achieved widespread production of the
dystrophin protein, which is absent in DMD-affected muscles, and
improvement in muscle function. They injected a morpholino antisense
oligonucleotide (AON) compound into a vein.
The morpholino AON causes cells to remove (skip) the
mutation in the dystrophin gene and to splice together the surrounding
genetic instructions. The exon-skipping technique can be targeted toward
several types of mutations seen in DMD.
AONs act at the RNA stage of protein synthesis. In this
phase, the processing normally removes some sections, known as introns, and keeps others, known as exons. Therapeutic AONs
cause cells to treat mutated exons as if they were introns.
The investigators say three consecutive intravenous
injections of a specific AON resulted in dystrophin production at about 30
percent of normal levels in the muscles of the abdomen, upper legs and rib
areas. Lower levels were present in the front lower leg muscles and
diaphragm, and no dystrophin was detected in the heart.
After seven weekly injections, the mice produced up to 50
percent of the normal level of dystrophin in some leg muscles, and 10
percent to 20 percent of the normal level in their rib, abdominal and
other leg muscles.
The dystrophin-producing muscle cells showed restoration
of a normal protein cluster at the cell membrane and other signs of
cellular normalization. When lower leg muscles were tested, they showed
greater force generation than did the same muscles in untreated
dystrophin-deficient mice, although it wasn’t as great as that of normal
mice.
“Our results show that morpholino-mediated antisense
therapy can achieve and maintain therapeutic levels of dystrophin
throughout the body musculature and provide a realistic option for the
treatment of the majority of DMD,” the authors say in their
publication.
Qi Lu said most DMD-affected boys have mutations in the
functionally noncritical region of the dystrophin gene, where the tested
therapy would work. “It has been estimated that no more than 20 antisense
oligos are required to treat the majority of the patients in whom this
would be applicable.”
Lu cautioned that much still needs to be done to improve
the efficiency of the dystrophin production, especially in the heart
muscle, and that the potential of the new AON strategy remains to be
tested in clinical trials. Trials in DMD patients are on the drawing board
in the United Kingdom. (Go to http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ and enter “Duchenne muscular dystrophy” into the search box.)
An Italian research team published
similar results in the March 7 issue of Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences. The team delivered
antisense genes to dystrophin-deficient mice via
intravenous injection and also got widespread dystrophin
production and significant functional improvement. |
| More Genes
Implicated in Charcot-Marie-Tooth |
| Charcot-Marie-Tooth
(CMT) disease is associated with mutations in dozens of
genes. More genetic causes have been implicated nearly every year since
the early 1990s, and two new disease-causing genes have recently been
identified.
CMT is a disorder of the peripheral nerves, which run
between the spinal cord and the periphery of the body, and allow movement
and sensation.
Broadly speaking, CMT is divided into type 1, which
results primarily from defects in the insulating coating, myelin, that
surrounds nerve fibers (axons); and type 2, which results primarily from
defects in the axons themselves. Intermediate types are a mixture of
axonal and myelin degeneration.
Since both myelin and nerve fibers contain multiple
proteins, it’s not surprising that many genetic flaws can lead to
CMT.
In the February issue of Nature Genetics, Albena Jordanova
at the University of Antwerp (Belgium) and Sofia (Bulgaria) Medical
University, and colleagues, describe three mutations in the gene for the
protein YARS in three unrelated families with an intermediate form of CMT
known as DI-CMTC. Jordanova has had recent MDA support for CMT
research.
YARS belongs to a family of proteins that are instrumental
in the translation of final genetic instructions into protein molecules.
It may play a special role in nerve fibers.
“What is fascinating about the genetic results, is that
the disease is caused by a ‘housekeeping’ gene,” says Florian Thomas,
professor of neurology, virology, and microbiology and immunology at Saint
Louis University and a member of the study team. “That term is used to
describe genes that ‘keep house’ and that have as wide a use in the body
as, for instance, Ajax does in the household.
“So the scientific question is, why does this CMT gene
cause only a peripheral neuropathy and not total body dysfunction?” Thomas
has some ideas but, he says, “The story is not finished.”
In another study, published in the February issue of
Annals of Neurology, Stephan Zuchner, at Duke University in Durham, N.C.,
and colleagues, identified mutations in the gene for the protein mitofusin
2 as a cause of a form of CMT that involves degeneration of the optic
nerves as well as the usual losses in movement and sensation.
Known as hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type
6, this condition causes a severe, early-onset peripheral nerve
disorder, with vision impairment later in life. (In this study, six out of
10 patients with vision loss experienced recovery to normal or nearly
normal vision levels, which the researchers attribute to probable nerve
fiber regeneration.)
The research team included Vincent Timmerman and Jordanova
at the University of Antwerp (Belgium), and Michael Shy at Wayne State
University in Detroit, all of whom have current or recent MDA funding for
CMT research. They studied six families and identified six different
CMT-causing mutations in the mitofusin 2 gene.
Mitofusin 2 has previously been found to cause CMT2A, an
axonal form of CMT that only rarely affects the optic nerves. The protein
is thought to affect the behavior of the mitochondria, the
energy-producing parts of cells.
Shy, a neurologist and a professor of molecular medicine
and genetics, sees rare and common forms of peripheral nerve disease at
the CMT clinic he directs at Wayne State. He has MDA funding to develop
gene therapy for CMT.
“My interest came from the genetic and biological side,”
he says, “but you learn [about daily care issues] as you go, by seeing
people.” |
| Protein
Variant May Lead to Myasthenia Gravis |
According to a report in the February issue of Annals of
Neurology, a variant form of the gene for the protein PTPN22 may increase
susceptibility to at least one type of myasthenia gravis
(MG). PTPN22 is thought to have regulatory functions in the immune
system.
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In MG, antibodies attack
Ach receptors, where signals from nerve
cells are received.
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In MG, an autoimmune disease, the immune system mistakenly
attacks muscle cells and interferes with their ability to receive signals
from nerve cells. About 90 percent of MG patients make antibodies that
attack the muscle cells’ Ach receptors, where chemical nerve signals
normally land.
In December, Torkel Vang at the Burnham Institute in La
Jolla, Calif., and colleagues reported that the PTPN22 variant may
predispose people to autoimmune disease in general (see “Research
Updates,” March-April).
Now, Claire Vandiedonck, at INSERM-Paris-Descartes
University in France, and colleagues have found a strong association of
the variant with one type of MG.
The investigators studied 470 people with MG and 296
without the disease. They categorized the MG patients according to whether
or not they had a thymus tumor (thymoma); and whether they were producing
antibodies to the protein titin.
Of the 293 people studied who had MG but didn’t have a thymoma or titin antibodies, 80 (13.7 percent) had the suspect
PTPN22 variant. In two other MG groups, about 10 percent had it; and in
the non-MG group, it was there in only 7.4 percent.
The authors say their finding supports the idea that MG is
more than one disease and provides a valuable lead for further
investigations. |
| Membrane Damage Added to FSHD
Picture |
A research group coordinated by Robert Bloch, an MDA
grantee at the University of Maryland in Baltimore, has added more pieces
to the puzzle of facioscapulohumeral
muscular dystrophy (FSHD).
Bloch and colleagues, who published their results in the
February issue of Annals of Neurology, found unusual diagonal structures
in the membranes of muscle cells taken from people with FSHD, as well as a
marked increase in the gap between each cell and its surrounding membrane.
Both changes were found in all nine FSHD biceps and deltoid muscle samples
(although they weren’t present throughout each sample), with none found in
samples from people without FSHD.
The researchers say the abnormalities are likely to
interfere with force transmission in the affected muscles. They don’t know
if, or how, these abnormalities are related to a recent finding that the
FRG1 protein is overproduced in FSHD (see “Research
Updates,” March-April) or to other genes in the FSHD region of
chromosome 4.
“It remains unclear whether the basic defect in FSHD
resides in a [membrane]-associated protein or whether the observed changes
at the [membrane] are secondary to a primary defect that lies elsewhere,”
the authors say.
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CLINICAL TRIALS AND STUDIES |
Genzyme Seeks FDA OK for
Pompe’s Treatment
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Genzyme hopes to obtain FDA approval
for Myozyme to treat Pompe’s disease in adults and
children.
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Genzyme, a Cambridge, Mass., biopharmaceutical company,
has applied
to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines
Agency for approval of Myozyme, a laboratory-developed enzyme to
replace missing acid maltase in patients with acid maltase
deficiency, or Pompe’s
disease. The FDA is expected to announce a decision about
Myozyme’s U.S.marketing approval this spring.
Two trials of Myozyme in babies with infantile-onset
Pompe’s disease have shown the drug to be promising. Genzyme also
sponsored an observational study of late-onset Pompe’s disease in older
patients to determine end points for a late-onset treatment trial now
being conducted.
The company has been giving Myozyme to patients not
eligible for its clinical trials in its “expanded access”
programs.
For more information about Genzyme’s Myozyme trials,
access programs and the Pompe Registry, go to http://www.pompe.com/; http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ (enter “Pompe” in the search box); or contact Genzyme at (800) 745-4447 or medinfo@genzyme.com.
Etanercept Study in
IBM Somewhat Encouraging
A pilot study of the drug etanercept (Enbrel) for inclusion-body
myositis (IBM) conducted at the University of Kansas Medical
Center in Kansas City and Ohio State University in Columbus is moderately
encouraging.
Etanercept, which is on the market to treat severe
rheumatoid arthritis, blocks the effects of TNF, a body chemical involved
in the inflammatory process. IBM also involves inflammation in most
cases.
Nine people with IBM received 25 milligrams of etanercept
in subcutaneous injections twice a week for an average of 17 months. The
etanercept-treated participants showed a small improvement in their grip
strength measurements after 12 months (but not after six) compared to
untreated patients. There was no improvement in muscles that move the
elbows or knees.
The team, which included Jerry Mendell and John Kissel,
co-directors of the MDA clinic at Ohio State, and Richard Barohn, who has
MDA funding for a different drug study at the University of Kansas,
published their results in a Jan. 28 supplement to the journal
Neurology.
They say that future IBM trials may need to last longer
than six months, and that a larger etanercept trial in which some patients
take a sham drug is indicated.
In MELAS, Side Effects of DCA
Outweigh Benefits
Dichloroacetate (DCA), a drug which researchers had
hoped would lower potentially toxic levels of lactic acid in MELAS (mitochondrial
myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokelike
episodes), has been found to have serious adverse effects on
nerves that outweighed any potential benefits.
Petra Kaufmann at the Neurological Institute of Columbia
University in New York, and colleagues, with support from the National
Institutes of Health and two small foundations, conducted the trial,
publishing results in the Feb. 14 issue of Neurology.
The investigators ended the study prematurely, after
finding evidence of significant damage to the peripheral nerves (those
running between the spinal cord and the periphery of the body) associated
with taking DCA.
It had been anticipated that DCA might decrease lactic
acid levels in the blood and nervous system and improve overall
functioning.
The 30 trial participants began taking DCA or a placebo at
varying times. When the study ended, only one person had completed the
planned three-year study period.
The investigators predict that the nerve damage in trial
participants is likely to resolve over the next two years, although they
anticipate some patients won’t completely recover. They’ll continue to
follow the patients.
Genetic Myotonias
Topic of NIH Study, Trial Plans
A study sponsored by the Rare Diseases Clinical Research
Network of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Md., aims
to pinpoint the precise defects in and design clinical trials for two
forms of genetic myotonia, the inability to relax muscles at will.
These forms of myotonia — myotonia congenita and paramyotonia
congenita — are sometimes called nondystrophic, to
separate them from myotonic muscular dystrophy.
The investigators are seeking 75 participants who are at
least 6 years old and meet study criteria. They’ll collect data about
symptoms and conduct physical exams and tests of strength, function,
electrophysiology and DNA. They plan to use the information to design
future clinical trials.
For more information, go to http://rarediseasesnetwork.epi.usf.edu/cinch/takeaction/findastudy.htm#nmd.
CoQ10 Deficiency Rare and
Easily Treatable
Weakness in the muscles of the shoulder and hip, combined
with other specific abnormalities, can signal a deficiency of coenzyme
Q10 and can be treated with supplements of coQ10, say researchers in
Germany and the United States, who published their results in the Jan. 24
issue of Neurology.
CoQ10 is a natural substance that participates in energy
production inside the mitochondria, energy-producing “assembly lines”
inside cells.
A combination of high levels of creatine kinase in the
blood, evidence of storage of lipids (fats) in muscle cells, and excess
proliferation of the mitochondria, with other mitochondrial abnormalities,
are the hallmarks of this rare disorder.
Rita Horvath at Ludwig-Maximilians University in Munich,
Germany, and colleagues, say coenzyme Q10 deficiency is generally
treatable with supplements of coenzyme Q10, which led to “dramatic
improvement” in the symptoms of all three of the patients described in
this report.
Salvatore DiMauro, a leading expert in metabolic muscle
disease and an MDA grantee at Columbia University in New York, was part of
the study team.
FDA Asks CepTor for More Data for
DMD Test
CepTor, a biopharmaceutical company in Hunt Valley, Md.,
announced in February that it has retained Banyan Biomarkers of Alachua,
Fla., to help it meet Food and Drug Administration requirements prior to
testing its drug Myodur in boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy
(DMD).
Myodur was developed as a blocker of calpain, an enzyme
that breaks down muscle tissue, on the theory that it could combat muscle
loss in DMD. The experimental drug is designed to target and inhibit
calpain in muscle cells. |
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| MORE MDA RESEARCH NEWS |
For up-to-the-minute news on
MDA research developments, visit MDA’s
Web site at www.mda.org.
Click on
"Research" for information on current research developments and active clinical
trials, and links to major medical/research sites. Look at the
Web site’s "News" section for news bulletins about
breaking research announcements.
For research news about amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis, see The MDA/ALS Newsmagazine
or go to www.als-mda.org. |
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