Gene therapy for Lou Gehrig's disease shows
promise
Friday, August 8, 2003 Posted: 9:34 AM EDT (1334 GMT)
WASHINGTON (AP) --
A new type of gene therapy doubled the life of mice with a laboratory form of
Lou Gehrig's disease and researchers said they are the planning to test the
technique on human patients.
In a study published this week in the journal Science, researchers at the
Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, and Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore report that injecting mice with a gene that makes a
nerve cell stimulating protein delayed symptoms of Lou Gehrig's disease and
extended the life span in laboratory mice.
The gene makes a molecule called insulin like growth factor, or IGF-1, a type
of protein that has produced marginal results against Lou Gehrig's disease in
human clinical trials.
By delivering the IGF-1 gene directly into muscle tissue, the researches
found that nerve cells were preserved and muscle wasting was reduced in mice
with a laboratory form of the disease.
Lou Gehrig's disease, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, causes the gradual
death of nerve cells that control muscle movement, resulting eventually in
paralysis and death. Its cause is unknown and there currently is no cure. ALS
attracted worldwide attention when New York Yankee first baseman Lou Gehrig
announced that he had the disease in 1939, two years before his death. ALS
affects about 30,000 Americans.
More study is needed before the gene therapy can be used in humans, but
researchers reported they were in the planning stages for human trials of the
treatment.
The research was conducted by Fred H. Gage, Brian K. Kaspar and Nushin
Sherkat of Salk, and Jeronia Llado and Jeffrey D. Rothstein of Hopkins.
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