Happy puppy: A treatment helps restore muscle function to dogs with a form of muscular dystrophy.
National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry of Tokyo and Children’s National Medical Center.

Biomedicine

Fixing a Genetic Flaw

A genetic technique successfully treats Duchenne muscular dystrophy in dogs.

  • Monday, March 23, 2009
  • By Courtney Humphries

An international team of researchers has successfully treated dogs with the canine form of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a rapidly progressing and ultimately fatal muscle disease that afflicts one out of every 3,600 boys. The researchers used a novel technique called exon skipping to restore partial function to the gene involved in Duchenne. The study, published in Annals of Neurology, gives hope that a similar approach could work in humans.

DMD is caused by an aberration in the gene that encodes dystrophin, an important structural protein in muscle cells. Patients with DMD are unable to produce functional dystrophin, which leads to holes in the outer membranes of their muscle cells. Eventually, their muscles degenerate faster than they can be rebuilt, and few patients survive beyond their early 30s.

Unlike traditional gene therapy, which attempts to replace a mutated gene with a functional copy, exon skipping relies on a variation of a technique called antisense, in which short synthetic DNA or RNA molecules are designed to bind to a region of DNA or RNA and block its function. Companies are developing antisense therapies for cancer, diabetes, heart disease, and autoimmune diseases, among others.

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The approach grew out of studies comparing DMD to a milder form of disease called Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). Both diseases arise when patients are missing portions of the dystrophin gene's exons, the areas of DNA that code for protein. Paradoxically, some BMD patients are missing much larger pieces of the gene yet are far healthier than patients with DMD. Several years ago, scientists found that the difference is not in how much of the gene is missing, but in how those missing portions affect the remaining gene sequence. Most Duchenne patients have frameshift mutations, which interfere with the cell's reading of three-letter DNA code. These deletions shift the remaining DNA sequence into different triplet groupings, rendering the gene unreadable. In Becker patients, the remaining DNA can still be read normally, allowing them to produce a smaller but still functional version of dystrophin.

Eric Hoffman, a lead author of the study at Children's National Medical Center, in Washington, DC, says that scientists realized they might help DMD patients by creating a "patch" that blocks transcription of a portion of the gene in a way that puts the remaining code back into sequence--essentially recreating the milder Becker muscular dystrophy.

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phoenix

172 Comments

  • 1057 Days Ago
  • 03/23/2009

biogenetic blueprints

As someone who inherited ocular-pharengeal dystrophy from my mothers genes any progress made in this field of genetic manipulation is to be applauded. And, if as the article states, this approach can be applied to treat a wider range of physical ailments, such as Cancer, which in addition to Alzheimers, is also knocking on my door, then perhaps Mr. Barack Obama can step up the program with some much needed funding for research instead of throwing it away on propping up a costly war in Afghanistan, which will not only incur terrible costs in lives lost, but cause almost unbearable pain and anguish to those families which they leave behind in the process.

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Hamletxi

2 Comments

  • 1057 Days Ago
  • 03/23/2009

Re: biogenetic blueprints

Your are so right.  All gene threapy reasearch benefits most of human disease.  Duchene Muscular Dystrophy is the most significant.  The Dystrophin gene is the largest human gene, thus the most difficult to work with.  If gene theraphy can be made to work with DMD it will provide the know how for all genetic diseases.  Supporting DMD research will help everyone.

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