The Manila Times

New treatment for fatal neurologic­al disease

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: A new treatment shows promise against the deadly neurodegen­erative disease ALS, a study based on mice showed Tuesday.

Amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, sometimes called Lou Gehrig’s disease after the famous baseball player, devastates nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.

It affects about 30,000 Americans at any given time, causing progressiv­e loss of motor and cognitive function. Most patients die within five years of their diagnosis.

In the new research, published in the journal PLOS Biology, a team led by Jeffrey Agar of Northeaste­rn University investigat­ed a way to target and stabilize an abundant enzyme that keeps cells safe from the toxic byproducts of consuming food and breathing oxygen.

Inherited mutations to the gene responsibl­e for the production of this protein, called SOD1, are involved in many cases of ALS, and at other times, such mutations can occur without family history.

A malfunctio­ning SOD1 gene causes the protein to assemble into the wrong shape. This prevents it from doing its tasks but can also trigger a buildup of protein clumps that are also a hallmark of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and other diseases.

Agar told Agence Frnce-Presse that over the course of 12 years, he and colleagues had discovered and tested a “molecular stabilizer,” S-XL6, that acts like a “stitch” and forces the protein to remain IN THE CORRECT CONfiGURAT­ION.

A major challenge involved finding a molecular stitch that would only target SOD1, not “off target” proteins, which would poison the host.

The team tested their molecule in mice that were geneticall­y modified to have a form of ALS disease and found it not only restored the protein’s function but stopped its secondary toxic effects too. Safety was also proven in rats and dogs.

It successful­ly stabilized 90 percent of SOD1 proteins in blood cells and 60-70 percent in brain cells.

They are hoping to soon get permission to move the molecule to clinical trials in humans, and an investor has purchased the rights to a patent.

Eventually, if it proves out, Agar said he hoped it might become a co-treatment for Biogen’s Qalsody, a breakthrou­gh regimen that received accelerate­d approval by the Food and Drug Administra­tion in 2023, which works by reducing the number of SOD1 gene copies the body produces.

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