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Gene therapy beats back brain wasting disease: study

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http://ca.news./s/afp/091105/health/health_disease_genetics_ald

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Thu Nov 5, 6:09 PM

PARIS (AFP) - A breakthrough mix of stem cell and gene therapy halted a

lethal brain-wasting illness in two young boys, and could prove

effective against other genetic disorders, researchers reported

Thursday.

The boys, both seven when treatment began in France, are beset with

X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, or ALD, a hereditary brain disease that

slowly strips away layers of fatty acids protecting nerve fibres in the

brain.

Without treatment, ALD -- which only strikes males -- results in a

downward spiral of physical and mental disability, and finally death.

Few patients reach adolescence.

The disease's terrible toll was depicted in the 1992 film " Lorenzo's

Oil " , the true story of an American couple's tireless struggle to find a

cure for their son.

" This is the first time that a very severe brain disease has been

treated with efficacy by gene therapy, " said lead researcher

Aubourg, a professor of paediatrics at University Paris-Descartes.

Up to now, ALD patients were given bone marrow transplants, a technique

hampered by the scarcity of donors and the risk of serious

complications.

In the new treatment, bone marrow stem cells were harvested from the

patients -- the boys, in effect, became their own donors.

The genetically defective stem cells were then " corrected " in a

laboratory by inserting properly functioning genes, and then reinserted

into the young patients after their diseased marrow had been destroyed.

In order to deliver the new, improved stem cells, the doctors devised a

vehicle, or " vector, " made from a modified and inactivated HIV virus.

The so-called " lentivirus " vector had never before been successfully

used for gene therapy in humans, Aubourg said in a statement.

HIV is the only known virus able to introduce a therapeutic gene into

the nucleus of non-dividing cells, such as stem cells and neurons.

After 14 to 16 months, the disintegration of the brain's protective

fatty acids, called myelin sheaths, had stopped.

And after two to two-and-a-half years, healthy ALD proteins were still

detectable in the boys, both of whom showed neurological improvement.

In principle, the technique should result in the expression of the

therapeutic gene " for life " because it is inserted into the chromosome,

said Aubourg.

Gene therapy is not without risk, the researchers cautioned, and the new

method may not be as effective with other diseases.

" There is still a lot of work to be done to make this gene therapy

vector more powerful, less complicated and less expensive. This is only

the beginning, " Aubourg said.

ALD is a rare disease, with only three dozen cases reported each year in

France, and 300 to 350 cases in the United States.

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