Press Release
Monica Coenraads
Director of Research, RSRF
Rett Syndrome Research Fund
EMBARGOED UNTIL FEBRUARY 8, 2007 2 p.m. U.S. EASTERN TIME
REVERSAL OF SYMPTOMS IN AN AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER
Rett Syndrome is reversed in genetic mouse model
Cincinnati, OH (February 8, 2007) -The Rett Syndrome Research Foundation (RSRF)
announces results of a landmark study reversing the symptoms of Rett Syndrome
(RTT) in a genetic mouse model. The findings, by Adrian Bird, Ph.D., of the
University of Edinburgh and Chairman of the RSRF Scientific Advisory Board,
appear online in Science Express on February 8, 2007. Rett Syndrome is a severe
childhood neurological disease that is the most physically disabling of the
autism spectrum disorders. The experiments were funded by the Rett Syndrome
Research Foundation (RSRF), the Wellcome Trust and the Rett Syndrome U.K./Jeans
for Genes.
Caused by mutations in the gene MECP2, RTT affects primarily girls, striking
at random in early childhood and destroying speech, normal movement and functional
hand use. Many children become wheelchair bound; those who walk display an abnormal,
stiff-legged gait. Disordered breathing patterns and Parkinson-like tremors
are common.
Restoration of fully functional MECP2 over a four week
period eradicated tremors and normalized breathing, mobility and gait in mice
that had previously been fully symptomatic and, in some cases,
only
days away from death.
"Like many other people, we expected that giving MECP2 to mice that were
already sick would not work," said Bird. "The idea that you could
put back an essential component after the damage to the brain is done and recover
an apparently normal mouse seemed farfetched, as nerve cells that developed
in the absence of a key component were assumed to be irrevocably damaged. The
results are gratifyingly clear, though, and must give hope to those who are
affected by this distressing disorder."
Bird is Buchanan Professor of Genetics at University of Edinburgh and Director
of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology. MECP2, first identified by Bird
in 1990, is considered to be a protein that regulates the expression of other
genes by turning them off at the appropriate time.
In 1999 Huda Zoghbi, M.D., Professor, Departments of Molecular and Human Genetics,
Pediatrics, Neurology, and Neuroscience at Baylor College of Medicine discovered
that RTT is caused by mutations in the MECP2 gene. Mutations in MECP2 are now
being seen in some cases of childhood schizophrenia, classic autism and learning
disabilities. "The findings are extraordinary, and
are of relevance not only to Rett Syndrome but to a much broader class of disorders,
including autism and schizophrenia. The successful restoration of normal function
demonstrated in the mouse models suggests that if we can develop therapies to
address the loss of MECP2 we may be able to reverse neurological damage in children
and adults with Rett, autism and related neuropsychiatric disorders,"
commented Zoghbi.
The reversal experiments were carried out in the Bird lab by research assistant
Jacky Guy. Employing technology known as Cre-lox recombination, she created
mouse models in which MECP2 was silenced by insertion of a Stop cassette into
the gene, resulting in the neurological deficits seen in RTT. Silencing could
be reversed at will by removing the Stop cassette, thereby reactivating the
MECP2 gene. This was achieved by treating the mice with a drug that caused the
enzyme Cre to enter the cell nucleus where it could splice out the cassette.
As well as losing overt behavioral defects, the mice also recovered a key electrophysiological
function of the brain. This was determined by measuring LTP (long-term potentiation)
which provides a quantifiable measurement of the ability of neurons to respond
to stimulation. LTP has long been thought to reflect the cellular basis of learning
and memory. Though LTP in RTT mice models was defective, it was restored to
normal function by the reversal experiments.
"The reversal of neurological defects, reported in
the remarkable article by Guy et al, is surprising because the cause of the
symptoms occurred early in development and was expected to be permanent. Of
particular note is the recovery of LTP, which is the best current physiological
correlate of learning and memory. These findings are very encouraging for those
searching for a treatment because they give hope that the symptoms could not
only be halted from progressing, but the course of the disease itself may be
able to be reversed," stated Fred Gage, Ph.D. of the Salk Institute
of Biological Studies.
"Dr. Bird's astonishing results usher in a new era for Rett Syndrome and
other autism spectrum disorders. The reversal experiments provide justification
for aggressive exploration of next steps on all fronts, from drug discovery
to gene correction. The Rett Syndrome Research Foundation
will be focused on a comprehensive effort to identify and speed treatments to
the children and adults in dire need of them," commented Monica
Coenraads, co-founder and Director of Research for RSRF and mother of a young
daughter with the disorder.
About the Rett Syndrome Research Foundation
The Rett Syndrome Research Foundation (www.rsrf.org) was created in late 1999
and is the largest private source of funds for biomedical research on Rett Syndrome.
About the Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is the largest charity in the UK and the second largest medical
research charity in the world. It funds innovative biomedical research, in the
UK and internationally, spending around £500 million each year to support
the brightest scientists with the best ideas. The Wellcome Trust supports public
debate about biomedical research and its impact on health and wellbeing. www.wellcome.ac.uk
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