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In Remembrance
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WHY THE NEW GENE FINDINGS ARE A CALL TO ACTION - A PACKARD PERSPECTIVE
http://www.alscenter.org/news/briefs/090304.cfm In 2003, when New England ALS scientists announced they'd discovered another form of familial ALS - the sixth one, and an adult form that seems to strike harder in the lower extremities and have a somewhat faster course - the hope was that the gene for it would soon surface. High excitement in the ALS research community always accompanies finding a new gene: Perhaps this one holds clues to reveal what triggers motor neuron death; perhaps this one will spark a really effective therapy. Last week, after a six-year search, the gene was announced by seasoned collaborators at the University of Massachusetts and Massachusetts General Hospital. Another research team at King's College in London backed up the finding. Found where they'd suspected it, on chromosome 16, the mutated FUS gene (for "fused in sarcoma") is responsible for perhaps 5 percent of familial ALS. And pinpointing it, after a long, thorough search, would be news enough. But this discovery appears to go beyond the usual. Packard scientists warmly welcome the appearance of m(for mutated) FUS for a key reason: It lends clout to a theory about a major destructive process in ALS that's been gathering evidence at the Packard Center and elsewhere more than a decade. "The fascinating thing about having the FUS gene linked to ALS," says Packard Scientific Director Piera Pasinelli, "is that it's yet another gene that plays a part in RNA processing." And having successful functioning of that molecule is crucial for cells to work normally. By way of background: RNA - specifically the messenger RNA molecule - carries DNA's blueprint for assembling proteins into the cell cytoplasm where their actual assembly occurs. Yet getting RNA to reflect DNA's "message" accurately, modifying it for efficiency and then transporting it from the cell nucleus to the cytoplasm is an involved, multi-step process. And it's a one that can go awry. In 1998, Packard scientists first published the find that some 65 percent ALS patients harbor abnormal messenger RNA molecules, specifically in the injured parts of their central nervous systems. But no one has known the cause of that or what, if any, part it plays in ALS's downhill course. More evidence: Not long ago, Packard researchers helped discover the familial ALS4 gene, one for an abnormal form of a protein called senataxin. Like FUS, the senataxin gene also has an RNA role, overseeing proper production of messenger RNA from its DNA blueprint. And last year, the King's College group showed mutations in yet another gene - one called TDP-43 - that appears both in patients with a variety of different familial ALS types and, amazingly, in sporadic ALS patients as well. Healthy people lack these mutations. (Last week, Packard scientist Wim Robberecht and his European team added to that, discovering a new variation of the TDP-gene in familial ALS patients.) * Among TDP-43's list of accomplishments? RNA processing. All this suggests that flawed RNA metabolism, then, may join ALS's seven "ugly stepsisters," as another of the biological pathways to go wrong in ALS. (In scientific terms, the seven stepsisters are: oxidative damage, misfolded protein aggregates, dysfunctional mitochondria, defects in motor neuron transport, growth factor deficiency, pathology of glial cells, glutamate excitotoxicity.) What has Packard scientists most engaged, however, is where the flawed RNA metabolism could lead. It's interesting, for example, that both patients with ALS from mTDP-43 and those with ALS from mFUS appear to show clumps of misfolded proteins - protein aggregates - in central nervous system cells, early in the disease. "This suggests that these aggregates are key agents, that they participate early in the genesis of ALS," says Packard scientist Phil Wong, who has just made a mouse model of ALS using a mutant TDP-43 gene. So an important next step, both for understanding and for therapy, Wong says, is to "see whether these aggregates are indeed critical players or if, instead, they're just ‘tombstones' that mark dying motor neurons." His mouse model should help answer that question. In this, the new "stepsister" may be the most useful. Because it shows up in both familial and sporadic patients, some researchers are even speculating that RNA gone awry may be the missing overarching principle that tells how the stepsisters are related. In other words, some are hoping it may be the key process that causes ALS. "The new discoveries, we believe, point strongly to flawed RNA metabolism as a key disease process to imitate in animal models for ALS," says Rothstein. "It's these tools - the gene-primed model mice and fish and fruit flies that Packard scientists offer the world's research community - that will enable us to understand ALS. Ultimately, they'll become the agents we'll all use to find effective therapies." *Robberecht is already busy making a zebrafish model of ALS using mutant TDP-43. His Packard colleague J. Paul Taylor, has begun testing a new TDP-43 fruit fly model. ___________________________________ About The Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins www.alscenter.org Located in Baltimore, the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins is a worldwide collaboration of scientists aimed at developing therapies and a cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. The Center is the only institution of its kind dedicated solely to the disease. Its research is meant to translate rapidly from the lab bench to the clinic, largely by eliminating time spent waiting for grants and lowering institutional barriers to sharing scientific results. Scientists and clinician members of the Packard Center have moved drugs reliably and rapidly from preclinical experiments to human trials. Direct or indirect links to international biotech or pharmaceutical companies bring the infrastructure and experience needed to make promising drugs into therapies. Packard scientists are the first to propose and test a combination approach to drug therapy, a tactic that has worked for AIDS, cancer and other diseases. ALS is a progressive, disabling neuromuscular disease that causes complete paralysis and loss of function - including the ability to eat, speak and breathe. ALS progresses quickly and is not curable. Most patients die within five years of diagnosis. _________________________________________ Rebecca Berger Research Program Coordinator Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins 5801 Smith Avenue | McAuley Suite 110 Baltimore, MD 21209 410.735.7678 direct 410.735.7680 fax rberger6@jhmi.edu www.alscenter.org www.fiesta5K.org
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