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PROGRESS IN HEART DISEASE GENE THERAPY
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
NEW ORLEANS (Nov 12, 1996)
Successful results introducing a missing gene into animal and
human tissue bodes well for gene therapy prospects for a fatal
childhood heart disease, report researchers.
Working in the laboratory, the scientists used an adenovirus
vector to introduce a gene that produces an enzyme missing in
the muscle cells of children with a rare genetic condition known
as Pompe's disease. One injected, the gene produced the missing
enzyme in muscle cells for an extended period of time. This is
the first demonstration of long-term production of the normal
enzyme without toxicity. The results offer the possibility of
single treatment by this method, the researchers say.
Pompe's disease causes cardiomyopathy (an enlargement and
weakening of heart muscle) in infants. Because of a genetic
defect, an essential enzyme is missing from the heart muscle
cells of infants with the disease.
The Hopkins scientists were able to isolated the defective gene
and then insert it in a short-lived and otherwise harmless type
of adenovirus which then carried the normal gene's DNA into mice
and into human muscle cells in the laboratory. The cells came
from children who died of Pompe's disease.
"In principle, we know a single gene disorder could be
treated by replacing a defective gene," says Paul D. Kessler,
M.D., an assistant professor of medicine at Hopkins. "But the
problem has always been a lack of good vectors for getting the
normal gene into cells long term."
The Hopkins group used an adeno-associated virus to
deliver the gene for the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase. Healthy
DNA was injected into muscles in the mice and began producing
the enzyme two weeks later and continued to produce it for at
least three months. More animal studies are planned.
"These results demonstrate that adeno-associated viral
vectors can effectively transfer genes into muscles in animals
and lead to sustained expression of a therapeutic protein," says
Barry J. Byrne, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of pediatric
cardiology at Hopkins.
Related information on the
Internet
American Heart Association
AHA Conference
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