Korea  | Russia  |  Malaysia |   Kazakhstan
Indonesia  | Oman  | All Others

eg.stem cell, stem cell treatment
Stem cell treatment | Parkinson's Disease | Multiple Sclerosis | ALS | Brain Injury | Spinal Cord Injury | Cerebaral Palsy | Batten Disease | Stroke
MSA | Muscular Dystrophy | Epilepsy | Optic neuritis | Encephalomyelitis | SMA | Huntingdon's disease | Friedrich ataxia | Diabetes
HOME > News > Article Content

New Genetic Mutation for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Dementia


http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/09/110921132336.htm

ScienceDaily (Sep. 21, 2011)
Unusual repeated segment responsible for more than a third of familial ALS cases worldwide.
A team led by scientists from Johns Hopkins and the National Institutes of Health has discovered a new genetic mutation for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and a related disease called frontotemporal dementia (FTD) that appears to account for more than a third of all inherited cases of these diseases. The researchers show in a new study published online on September 21 in Neuron that this mutation, found within a gene called C9ORF72, is about twice as common as all the other mutations discovered thus far for the disease combined.

The findings, say study leader Bryan J. Traynor, M.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and chief of the Neuromuscular Diseases Research Unit at the NIH, could help scientists develop new animal models of ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, and eventually new targets for attacking the more common sporadic form of the disease, which isn't inherited and appears to crop up in the population at random.

Though a handful of other genetic mutations have been linked to inherited, or familial, ALS and FTD over the past several years, these mutations appear to account for only about a quarter of cases. Knowing that other ALS- and FTD-causing mutations remain undiscovered in the genome, the team focused their search on a place that other studies had suggested might hold promise: the short arm of chromosome 9. While previous research had suggested this as a likely hotbed for genetic problems that cause ALS and FTD, the exact location of the responsible mutation or which genes might be affected was unknown.

"If you think of chromosomes like geographic regions, we knew what city this mutation was located in, and what part of the city, but we didn't know what street it was located on or which house," explains Traynor. "We were really looking for the exact address for this mutation."

To narrow down the mutation's location, Traynor and his colleagues worked with collaborators around the world, using a next-generation genomic sequencing technique on pieces of chromosome 9 sampled from ALS and FTD patients in unrelated Welsh and Dutch families in which the diseases had been diagnosed in multiple generations. They compared sequences from these affected individuals to healthy people, both unaffected relatives and people outside these families who had never been diagnosed with ALS or FTD.

In just the affected individuals, the sequences turned up an unusual section of chromosome 9 near the C9ORF72 gene in which a six-base DNA sequence (GGGGCC) was repeated over and over. When the researchers looked at DNA samples from other patients with familial ALS and FTD from Finland, the country with the highest incidence of these diseases worldwide, this same unusual segment was present in nearly half of cases, stretching from hundreds to thousands of repeats.

"Together with another mutation in a previously discovered familial ALS gene known as SOD1, this means that we are now able to explain nearly all of familial ALS disease in Finland," Traynor notes.

Seeking confirmation in other familial ALS and FTD cases around the globe, the researchers tested samples from patients in Italy, Germany, and North America. Sure enough, the repeats were present in about 38 percent of patients, but never in healthy individuals.

Traynor notes that he and his colleagues don't yet know how the repeated segments might cause familial ALS and FTD. It could be that they affect the function of C9ORF72, whose purpose is not yet known. However, the team thinks a more likely mechanism is that the repeated segments cause affected cells to manufacture a slew of toxic RNA, genetic material that clogs up cells and eventually leads to their demise. The slow buildup of toxic RNA could be the reason why ALS and FTD tend to show up in middle age, rather than earlier in life. The researchers note that previous work has already shown abnormal RNA metabolism in ALS patients now known to carry this new mutation, lending support for this theory.

Eventually, Traynor adds, the finding could help scientists find new ways to treat both familial ALS and FTD, as well as the more common sporadic forms of these diseases. Creating mouse models with the newly found mutation and other genetic anomalies linked to ALS and FTD could lend insight on what goes wrong in motor neurons, the cells primarily affected by these diseases, potentially leading to new areas to target with drugs or other interventions.

Other Johns Hopkins researchers who participated in this study include Sonja W. Scholz, M.D., PhD, and Jeffrey D. Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D., who also serves as the John W. Griffin, M.D. Director for the Johns Hopkins Brain Science Institute.

In the same issue of Neuron, a team led by scientists from the Mayo Clinic published a paper showing that it independently identified the same repeat expansion as a genetic cause for ALS and FTD.

 



Related Information:

  • The Chinese Government Gives Top Priority to Stem Cell Research and Development   
  • The Washington Post report regarding our center and specialized stem cell treatment   
  • Stem cell therapy, a promising novel endeavor for neurological disorders   
  • Brain Imaging Differences Evident at 6 Months in High-Risk Infants Who Later Develop Autism   
  • New Treatment for Traumatic Brain Injury Shows Promise in Animals   
  • Stem Cell Treatments Improve Heart Function After Heart Attack   
  • Cognitive Stimulation Beneficial in Dementia   
  • New Imaging Methods Show Challenges of Identifying Cognitive Abilities in Severely Brain-Injured Patients   
  • Huntington Disease Breakthrough New Potential Therapy That Restores Motor Function Being Planned for Clinical Trial   
  • In Mouse Model Bexarotene Quickly Reverses Alzheimer's Symptoms   
  • Study of Live Human Neurons Reveals Parkinson's Origins   
  • New Drug Doesn't Improve Disability Among Stroke Patients, Researchers Find   
  • Anemia May More Than Triple Your Risk of Dying After a Stroke   
  • Researchers Visualize the Development of Parkinson's Cells   
  • Surprisingly High Number of Adults With Severe Learning Disabilities Also Have Autism   
  • Brain Glia Cells Increase Their DNA Content to Preserve Vital Blood-Brain Barrier   
  • Stem Cells   
  • PET Effectively Detects Dementia, Decade of Research Shows   
  • Neurons Grown from Skin Cells May Hold Clues to Autism   
  • Stem Cell Therapy Reverses Diabetes: Stem Cells from Cord Blood Used to Re-Educate Diabetic's Own T Cells   
  • Research Demonstrating Link Between Virus and MS Could Point the Way to Treatment and Prevention   
  • Low Vitamin D Levels Linked to Depression, Psychiatrists Report   
  • New Hope for Diseases of Protein Folding Such as Alzheimer¡¯s, Parkinson¡¯s Diseases, ALS, Cancer and Diabetes   
  • Autism May Be Linked to Abnormal Immune System Characteristics and Novel Protein Fragment   
  • Alzheimer's Damage Occurs Early   
  • Another Potential Risk Factor for Developing Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in Women   
  • Brain Cell Malfunction in Schizophrenia Identified   
  • Alzheimer's: Diet Patterns May Keep Brain from Shrinking   
  • 'Rare' Brain Disorder May Be More Common Than Thought, Scientists Say   
  • Turn 'Signals' for Neuron Growth Identified   
  • Treatment
    The Parkinson's Clinical Center
    Doctor Blogs
    Treatment Data
    Contact Us

  • What are stem cells and how do they work to treat various diseases?   
  • How do stem cells know where to go and what to do?   
  • What kinds of stem cells does your medical center use and are they safe?   
  • Where do the stem cells come from?   
  • Is stem cell treatment safe? Is it really effective?   
  • How do I know if I am a good candidate for stem cell therapy?   
  • How long should I expect to stay in Beijing for the treatment?   
  • Can you use adult stem cells from my own bone marrow?   
  • What methods do you use to transplant stem cells into the patient's body?   
  • What should I expect to experience during the stem cell treatment?   
  • Do the doctors use anesthesia during the operation?   
  • What other drugs does the doctor combine with the stem cells for therapy?   
  • How long after surgery will it be before I can bathe or shower?   
  • For Batten disease treatment, what type of stem cells are used?   
  • About the neural growth factors that your medical center use   
  • If your hospitals have an age restriction on patients?   
  • What medications do you use on Batten disease patients?   
  • Is it possible for you to manufacture the TPP1 enzyme and deliver it?   
  • When I send my records to your hospital, does a doctor read them?   
  • Is general anesthesia used?   
  • Is other therapy done in addition to stem cell infusion?   
  • What types of rehabilitation training is done?   
  • What will my treatment schedule be like?   
  • Does the doctor have to penetrate the spinal canal to infuse the stem cells   
  • If I have to have surgery, how long will it take for the wound to heal?   
  • Will I lose very much blood?   
  • If there is surgery, can I fly back home before the wound has healed?   
  • Does your medical center also offer conventional treatment?   
  • What is the most effective way to contact us?   
  • Are stem cells pre-tested for HIV and Hepatitis? What else do you test?   
  • Send Inquiry Contact Us Sitemap Help

    Link:Like Cell Research Center | stemcellshezhong.com
    Copyright © 2011 unistemcells.com All rights reserved.