Living With Huntington Disease
Cure Found for Huntington Disease in Mice Offers Hope for Treatment in Humans
Embargoed until June 16, 2006, 7:00 AM EST
VANCOUVER, B.C. � June 16, 2006: Researchers at the Child and Family Research
Institute�s Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics (CMMT) have provided
ground-breaking evidence for a cure for Huntington disease in a mouse offering hope
that this disease can be relieved in humans.
Published today in Cell journal, Dr. Michael Hayden and colleagues discovered that by
preventing the cleavage of the mutant huntingtin protein responsible for Huntington
disease (HD) in a mouse model, the degenerative symptoms underlying the illness do
not appear and the mouse displays normal brain function. This is the first time that a
cure for HD in mice has been successfully achieved.
�Ten years ago, we discovered that huntingtin is cleaved by �molecular scissors� which
led to the hypothesis that cleavage of huntingtin may play a key role in causing
Huntington disease�, said Dr. Michael Hayden, Director and Senior Scientist at the
University of British Columbia�s Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics.
Now a decade later, this hypothesis has resulted in a landmark discovery. �This is a
monumental effort that provides the most compelling evidence of this hypothesis to
date�, said Dr. Marian DiFiglia, Professor in Neurology, Massachusetts General
Hospital, Harvard Medical School and one of the world�s leading experts on Huntington
disease. �Dr. Hayden and his team have shown in convincing fashion that many of the
changes seen in HD patients can be erased in HD mice simply by engineering a
mutation into the disease gene that prevents the protein from getting cleaved at a
specific site�.
To explore the role of cleavage, Dr. Hayden�s team established an animal model of HD
that replicated the key disease features seen in patients. A unique aspect of this
particular animal model is that it embodied the human HD gene in exactly the same way
seen in patients. This replication allowed researchers to examine the progression of HD
symptoms including the inevitable cleavage of the mutant huntingtin protein. In the
study, researchers confirmed that the deadly cleavage is caused by a key enzyme
called caspase-6. By blocking the action of this target, they showed that the mouse did
not develop any symptoms of Huntington disease.
Hayden's team is now trying to test this model of prevention in a mouse using drug
inhibitors and then ultimately in humans. �Our findings are important because they tell
us exactly what we need to do next�, said Dr. Rona Graham, Post Doctoral Fellow at the
CMMT and lead author in the study.
This work is also pivotal for the individuals and families affected by Huntington disease.
�Patients of this disease should know that this is a research milestone for all and that
this work brings the field closer to finding effective treatment for a devastating disorder�,
said Dr. DiFiglia.
The Huntington Society of Canada (HSC), a national network of volunteers and
professionals united in the fight against HD, echoed this sentiment. �This ground-breaking
research provides great hope for the Huntington community�, said Don
Lamont, the Society�s CEO and Executive Director. �This research brings us closer to
treatment and ultimately a cure�.
Huntington disease (HD) is a degenerative brain disease that affects one in every
10,000 Canadians. One in 1,000 is touched by HD � for example, as a person with HD,
a family member, a person at risk, caregiver or friend. The disease results from
degeneration of neurons in certain areas of the brain causing uncontrolled movements,
loss of intellectual faculties, and emotional disturbances. Currently, there is no treatment
to delay or prevent HD in patients.
This research was funded by Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Hereditary
Disease Foundation, Huntington Disease Society of America, Michael Smith Foundation
for Health Research, High Q Foundation, Merck Frosst, Child and Family Research
Institute of BC.
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