The
Huntington's Scene In New Zealand |
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Articles taken from the JUNE 2002 Huntington's News. The Quarterly Newsletter of the Huntington's Decease Associations of New Zealand |
Stanford Researchers gain new insight into treatment
options for Huntington disease
This is exciting
because it has implications for therapy," said Lawrence Steinman, MD, professor of
neurological sciences and pediatrics and senior author of the study published in the
February 2002 issue of Nature Medicine.
In their research
investigators injected the compound "cystamine" into HD mice. They were
expecting to see the compound have a direct effect on the process of the development of
toxic protein aggregates in the brain. These aggregates are known to speed up brain cell
death, and play a critical role in the progression of the disease. However, while they
were expecting one result, they actually got a different unexpected reaction.
Cystamine had no
impact on the process of protein aggregation. Instead, the researchers found that mice
treated with cystamine had higher levels of three particularly interesting genes, all of
which are known to produce proteins that play a protective role in the brain. These same
proteins - known as "neuroprotective proteins' - were also found at increased levels
in the brains of human Huntington's patients. This finding suggested that the brain makes
an unsuccessful attempt to protect itself against Huntington disease.
Can you
translate that for me?
Based on this study,
researchers believe that Huntington disease causes certain proteins to be produced in
certain brain cells to try and protect them against the effects of HD. These proteins, known as neuroprotective
proteins" act like bouncers at a bar. First, they attach themselves to the toxic
protein huntingtin. Then they drag the toxic huntingtin out of the nucleus of the cell
(the brain cell's control centre), and take it into the body of the cell. From there they
drag the huntingtin to a place in the cell where enzymes "eat" the huntingtin
and destroy it. However, enough huntingtin builds up that even the neuroprotective
proteins can't completely stop, only slow down, the process leading to the death of the
brain cells.
By using
cystamine Dr Steinman and his team "boosted" the brain's natural defenses, and
this is what caused the positive effect in the mice.
Though these findings
suggest that cystamine could someday offer hope to patients with Huntington disease, the
quest for other potentially better compounds will continue. ln recent years, other
compounds have also been reported to extend the lives of mice suffering from Huntington's,
Steinman said, "Perhaps multiple treatments in combination would have even greater
benefits."
Marcela Karpuj, primary author of the study, is optimistic about the results. "I
think this is very exciting", she said. "In the future, treatments to raise the
levels of neuroprotective proteins could be given to humans and could be therapeutic for
other neurodegenerative diseases as well?
SM/Office of News and Public
Affairs. Stanford University California