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Under
Embargo Till: 16:00 UTC April 09, 2009 Posted:
16:00 UTC 04/09/2009
New
Therapeutic Strategy Could Target Toxic Protein in Most Patients
with Huntington’s Disease
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Howard Hughes
Medical Institute researchers have designed tiny RNA molecules
that shut off the gene that causes Huntington’s disease
without damaging that gene’s healthy counterpart, which
maintains the health and vitality of neurons. Laboratory studies
suggest that a single small interfering RNA could reduce
production of the damaging Huntingtin protein in nearly half of
people with the disease. Another 25 percent of patients might
benefit from one of a set of four additional small interfering
RNAs.
Phillip D. Zamore, an HHMI
investigator at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in
Worcester, and his colleagues reported their findings in an
article published April 9, 2009, in the journal Current
Biology.
“The most exciting part
of the study was finding one short interfering RNA that clearly
is the top candidate for a clinical trial, where the patient
population is predicted to be sufficiently large that it merits
the development of a drug you could take into trial.” Phillip
D. Zamore
Phillip
D. Zamore, Ph.D
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Credit:
Robert E. Klein/AP, ©HHMI
There is no treatment for
Huntington’s disease, which is caused by a mutant form of
the Huntingtin gene. Huntingtin is required for
healthy nerve cells, but the mutant gene makes a toxic protein
that contains excess amounts of the amino acid glutamine.
The key to whether the
Huntingtin gene is normal or defective lies in a kind of
genetic stutter: a repetitive sequence of the DNA triplet CAG,
which codes for the amino acid glutamine. Stretches of CAG
"repeats" appear in every human being's Huntingtin
gene, but the length varies. Whereas the normal gene has a
sequence of between six and 34 CAG repeats, the abnormal gene
contains many more. In fact, any stretch of DNA containing more
than 40 of these repeats ensures that its bearer will develop
Huntington's—the greater the number of repeats, the earlier
the disease strikes and the greater its ferocity. The abnormal
Huntingtin protein causes movement disorders, cognitive failure,
and ultimately, death. Children who have a parent with
Huntington’s disease have a 50 percent chance of inheriting
the disease themselves.
Zamore studies how RNA
interference can be used to silence genes selectively. In the
1990s, he and other scientists learned they could shut down the
production of specific proteins by introducing double-stranded
RNA into the cell that is identical to the RNA they wanted to
turn off. These strands of RNA, known as short interfering RNA
(siRNA), slice apart the original RNA, which the cell then
destroys.
But nine years ago, when
researcher Neil Aronin, who is also at UMass Medical School,
proposed using the technique to attack Huntington’s, Zamore
couldn’t see a way.
“I explained to him that
you can’t,” Zamore said. The problem was that the
disease gene and its healthy allele are almost identical, and
Zamore told Aronin that he wouldn’t be able to distinguish
between the two forms of Huntingtin. “Then, as he
was leaving my office, it occurred to me that you could,”
he recalled. The key was something called a single nucleotide
polymorphism or SNP.
A SNP is any place on the
genetic code that varies by a single unit. The genetic code is
written with four letters, A, C, T, and G, which stand for the
four nucleotides, adenosine, cytidine, thymidine, and guanosine.
The pattern of these nucleotides dictates which protein is
encoded by a given gene. DNA in the nucleus is transcribed as
messenger RNA, which leaves the nucleus and begins making
proteins based on the order of these four bases. A person’s
two copies of any gene may vary at these locations “simply
because the two parents have different ancestries,” Zamore
said.
Zamore, Aronin, and their
collaborators decided to look for such variation in the
Huntingtin gene. It was a bit of a long shot. Even if the
lab found relevant SNPs, it was likely few people would share the
same polymorphisms, making drug development and testing nearly --
if not completely -- impossible.
Then they got lucky. The search
for SNPs in the genetic material of 109 Huntington patients
uncovered a single SNP carried by 48 percent of people with
Huntington’s. “This SNP is actually associated with
the disease. We don’t know why,” Zamore said. That
meant a single siRNA could shut off expression in the mutant
Huntingtin gene – while leaving cells’ healthy
Huntingtin genes intact -- in almost half of all U.S. and
European Huntington’s patients.
“The most exciting part
of the study was finding one siRNA that clearly is the top
candidate for a clinical trial, where the patient population is
predicted to be sufficiently large that it merits the development
of a drug you could take into trial,” Zamore said.
“That takes away the
biggest worry we had, which was that the number of siRNAs we
would have to test in order to have impact on the disease would
be too large, and as a consequence the FDA would never approve
any trial,” he continued.
By adding an siRNA against one
of two other common SNPs, Zamore says gene silencing could be
effective in 75 percent of patients with Huntington’s
disease in the U.S. and Europe. Although the group found other
SNPs, targeting more of them failed to increase the number of
patients who could be helped, he said.
The next problem became
developing siRNAs that could discriminate between target mRNAs
and non-target. “That turned out to be frustratingly
difficult,” Zamore said. In tests of human cells, the siRNA
sometimes sliced up the disease RNA, as it should. But sometimes
it destroyed the normal Huntingtin RNA as well. To prevent
this error, Zamore and his colleagues changed one more nucleotide
base on the siRNA. Now, the silencing RNA was different from the
healthy mRNA by two nucleotides, making it less likely to grab
the good RNA.
Further research in mice will
examine the efficacy of the siRNA tool. “The siRNA has to
be sufficiently stable, and has to get into the right cells, and
has to discriminate between the two (genes). It’s
incredibly expensive work,” he said.
Zamore acknowledges that even
with this progress, they’re a long way from a treatment for
Huntington’s. “The Huntington’s community is
very savvy about understanding that scientific progress is always
plodding. It’s the sum of lots of little steps. From our
perspective, the most important thing is to keep taking those
steps.”
Source:
HHMI
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