Misfolded proteins (orange) in the endoplasmic reticulum may play a role in Wolfram syndromes many symptoms.
By Mitch LeslieFeb. 11, 2021 , 2:00 PM
Maureen Marshall-Doss says the first sign that her vision was deteriorating came when she misidentified the color of a dress. At a backyard get-together about 20 years ago, the Indianapolis resident pointed out an attractive yellow dress another woman was wearing. You see that as yellow? Shes wearing a pink dress, Marshall-Doss recalls her husband responding.
Today, Marshall-Doss is virtually blind. With help from custom made eyeglasses that magnify objects 500 times, I can see shapes, she says. But she can no longer drive and had to quit the job she loved as a school librarian. Along with her dimming vision, she has type 1 diabetes and has lost her sense of taste and smell.
Marshall-Doss is one of 15,000 to 30,000 people around the world with Wolfram syndrome, a genetic disease. For decades, the condition remained enigmatic, untreatable, and fatal. But in the past few years, insights into its mechanism have begun to pay off, leading to the first clinical trials of drugs that might slow the illness and sparking hopes that gene therapy and the CRISPR DNA-editing tool might rectify the underlying genetic flaws. Here is a rare disease that the basic science is telling us how to treat, says physiologist Barbara Ehrlich of the Yale School of Medicine.
The research could also aid more than the relatively few patients with Wolfram syndrome. Driving the diseases many symptoms is a malfunction of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the multichambered organelle that serves as a finishing school for many cellular proteins. Known as ER stress, the same problem helps propel far more common illnesses, including type 2 diabetes, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinsons disease, and Alzheimers disease. Wolfram syndrome is the prototype of an endoplasmic reticulum disorder, says medical geneticist Fumihiko Fumi Urano of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Because Wolfram syndrome is simpler, says Scott Oakes, a cell biologist and pathologist at the University of Chicago, researchers think it could illuminate the mechanisms of other ER-disrupting diseases, which affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide.
In the late 1930s,four children with diabetes were going blind, and doctors were stumped. Like many other people in the United States struggling through the Great Depression, the siblings ate a paltry diet, subsisting on potatoes, bread, oatmeal, and a little milk. But after examining three of the children, Donald Wolfram, a physician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and an ophthalmologist colleague ruled out malnutrition as the cause of their puzzling condition. Lead poisoning and syphilisthough common enoughwerent to blame, either. When Wolfram and his partner wrote up the cases in 1938, they concluded that the symptoms could be manifestations of an hereditary or acquired cerebral lesion.
The physicians were right that the syndrome eventually named for Wolfram is hereditary. Recessive mutations in the gene for a protein called wolframin are responsible for most cases, with glitches in a second gene causing most of the rest. However, the pair was wrong to think the defect lies only in the brain. Instead, the symptoms stem from widespread cell death. Its definitely a disease that affects the whole body, Marshall-Doss says.
The first sign of the illness, appearing when patients are children, is usually diabetes mellitus, or faulty sugar metabolism, sparked by the demise of insulin-secreting beta cells in the pancreas. Most patients also develop the unrelated condition diabetes insipidus, in which the pituitary gland doesnt dole out enough of a hormone that helps control the bodys fluid balance, causing the kidneys to produce huge amounts of urine.
Mutations in the gene for wolframin disrupt the endoplasmic reticulum and lead to cell death throughout the body, causing a range of symptoms.
V. Altounian/Science
Ellie White, 19, of Centennial, Colorado, who was diagnosed with Wolfram syndrome 12 years ago, says she hasnt had a full night of sleep since she was 3 years old. She gets up again and again to use the bathroom and monitor her blood sugar.
Yet she and other patients say that as disruptive as those problems are, they are not the diseases most dismaying consequence. The biggest symptom of Wolfram syndrome that affects me the most is my vision, White says. Because neurons in the optic nerve perish, patients usually go blind within 10 years of their first visual symptoms.
Other neurons die as well. As the disease progresses, brain cells expire, and walking, breathing, and swallowing become difficult. Most people with Wolfram syndrome die before age 40, often because they can no longer breathe. At 57, Marshall-Doss is one of the oldest patients; one of her mutated genes may yield a partly functional version of wolframin, triggering a milder form of the disease, Urano says.
Two advanceshave made it possible to begin to tackle those symptoms. The first was Uranos discovery nearly 20 years ago that linked Wolfram syndrome to ER stress. The ER is where about one-third of a cells newly made proteins fold into the correct shapes and undergo fine-tuning. Cells can develop ER stress whenever they are under duress, such as when they dont have enough oxygen or when misfolded proteins begin to pile up inside the organelle.
In test tube experiments, Urano and his colleagues were measuring the activity of genes to pinpoint which ones help alleviate ER stress. One gene that popped up encodes wolframin, which scientists had shown in 1998 was mutated in patients with Wolfram syndrome. Following up on that finding, Urano and his team determined that wolframin takes part in whats known as the unfolded protein response, which is a mechanism for coping with ER stress in which cells take steps including dialing back protein production.
Scientists think wolframin plays a key role in the unfolded protein response, though they havent nailed down exactly how. When wolframin is impaired, cells become vulnerable to ER stress. And if they cant relieve that stress, they often self-destruct, which could explain why so many neurons and beta cells die in the disease.
Defective wolframin may harm cells in other ways. The ER tends the cells supply of calcium, continually releasing and absorbing the ion to control the amount in the cytoplasm. Changes in calcium levels promote certain cellular activities, including the contraction of heart muscle cells and the release of neurotransmitters by neurons. And wolframin affects calcium regulation.
Beta cells genetically engineered to lack functional wolframin brim with calcium, Ehrlich and colleagues reported in July 2020 in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. When exposed to lots of sugar, the altered cells release less insulin and are more likely to die than healthy beta cells, the team found. The cells share that vulnerability with beta cells from patients with Wolfram syndrome. We think that excess calcium is leading to excess cell death, Ehrlich says.
ER malfunctions could hamstring other organelles as well. The ER donates calcium to the mitochondria, the cells power plants, helping them generate energy. In 2018, a team led by molecular biologist Ccile Delettre and molecular and cellular biologist Benjamin Delprat, both of the French biomedical research agency INSERM, discovered that in cells from patients with Wolfram syndrome, mitochondria receive less calcium from the ER and produce less energy. Those underpowered mitochondria could spur the death of optic nerve cells, the researchers speculate.
Fumihiko Urano holds dantrolene, a muscle relaxant drug he helped test as a treatment for Wolfram syndrome.
The link between ER stress and Wolfram syndrome has been crucial for identifying potential treatments because otherwise we would have nothing to target, Urano says. But a second development was also key, he says: the advocacy and support of patient organizations, such as the Snow Foundation and the Ellie White Foundation, headed by its namesakes mother. The foundations have stepped up with money for lab research and clinical trials when other sources, including government agencies, didnt come through.
Scientists, patients, and their advocates say Urano also deserves much of the credit. Besides treating patients, he heads the international registry of cases and has taken the lead in organizing clinical trials, screening compounds for possible use as treatments, and devising potential therapies. Fumi is clearly the driving force, says Stephanie Snow Gebel, co-founder of the Snow Foundation, who about 10 years ago helped persuade him to forgo a plum job as department chair at a Japanese university and take over the Wolfram program at Washington University.
Patients could soonstart to reap the benefits. In 2016, Urano and colleagues started the worlds first clinical trial for the disease: a phase 1/2 study of dantrolene, an approved muscle relaxant. The molecule was a top performer when they screened 73 potential treatments for their ability to save cells with terminal ER stress. Dantrolene didnt improve vision in the 22 participants, including White, the scientists reported in an October 2020 preprint. But in some patients, beta cells appeared to be working better and releasing more insulin. The drug is safe, but Urano says it will need to be chemically tweaked to target its effects before future trials are warranted.
Researchers are pursuing other possible treatments targeting ER stress or calcium levels. In 2018, U.K. scientists launched a trial that will include 70 patients to evaluate sodium valproate, a therapy for bipolar disorder and epilepsy that, in the lab, prevents cells with faulty wolframin from dying. Last year, another compound that emerged from Uranos screens, the diabetes drug liraglutide, entered a clinical trial. Also last year, an experimental drug developed by Amylyx Pharmaceuticals for Alzheimers disease and ALS received orphan drug designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for Wolfram syndrome because it curbs ER stress. That designation offers tax breaks and other incentives, and it will get trials started sooner, Urano says.
Ehrlich and her team have a candidate of their own that they have begun to test in rodents: the drug ibudilast, which is approved in Japan to treat asthma. The researchers found it reduces calcium levels in beta cells lacking wolframin and boosts their survival and insulin output. New screening projects may reveal still more candidates.
But Urano knows that even if a treatment receives approval, it would be only a Band-Aid for Wolfram syndrome. Hoping to develop a genetic cure, he and colleagues are introducing replacement genes into cells from patients and from mice engineered to replicate the disease. The researchers are endowing the cells with healthy copies of the gene for wolframin or the gene for a protein that reduces ER stress to determine whether they restore cellular function and reduce cell death. At INSERM, Delettre and colleagues are also evaluating whether directing a working gene into optic nerve cells can curtail vision loss in mice with faulty wolframin. The scientists are still gathering data, but early results suggest the treatment can halt the deterioration.
Urano and his collaborators have also turned to the genome editor CRISPR, deploying it to correct the gene defect in patients stem cells and then growing them into beta cells. When the researchers transplanted the revamped cells into mice with diabetes, the animals blood sugar returned to healthy levels, the team reported in April 2020 inScience Translational Medicine.
Stem cell biologist Catherine Verfaillie of KU Leuven is collaborating on the CRISPR research. But she notes that because the faulty wolframin gene affects so many tissues, researchers will have to figure out how to deliver the CRISPR components to most cells in large organs such as the brain and livera prospect she calls pretty daunting. Urano agrees, predicting that CRISPR-based Wolfram therapies might take 10 to 20 years to develop. The alternative approach, gene therapy, could reach clinical trials more quickly, in 3 to 10 years, he says, because researchers have more experience with gene therapy and have created several treatments that have already been approved for other illnesses.
Because it stems from a single genetic glitch, Wolfram syndrome could also help scientists tease out the role of the ER in more complex diseases, including neurological conditions, type 2 diabetes, and cancer. The ER also falters in those diseases, causing cells to die, but the mechanism is harder to discern because they stem from myriad genetic and environmental factors. In Alzheimers disease, for instance, neurons develop ER stress as misfolded proteins accumulate inside and outside the cells.
Besides deepening researchers understanding of other conditions, the research on Wolfram syndrome might even deliver candidate treatments. Everyone would be very excited if we can make advances in targeting ER stress in Wolfram syndrome, Oakes says. It would open up the whole field to doing this in other degenerative diseases.
Link:
- The therapeutic potential of stem cells - PubMed Central (PMC) - November 12th, 2024
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Is Projected To Achieve A Market Value Of USD 3.40 Bn. By 2030, Reflecting A Robus... - WhaTech - October 18th, 2024
- Doctor who provided ineffective stem cell therapies disciplined 6 years after investigation began - CBS Chicago - October 15th, 2024
- Study reveals the benefits and downside of fasting - Big Think - September 28th, 2024
- Tiny vesicles from umbilical cord blood may have therapeutic benefit - Parkinson's News Today - September 28th, 2024
- The Stem Cell Solution Review: Is This Program the Future of Anti-Aging and Recovery? - Enumclaw Courier-Herald - September 28th, 2024
- Cell and Gene Therapy Research To Benefit From New Stem Cell Collection Center - Technology Networks - September 25th, 2024
- Stem Cell Restore: A Full Review of Its Role in Promoting Regeneration and Vitality - Islands' Sounder - September 18th, 2024
- Is fasting good for you? A new study reveals some hidden risks and benefits of the practice - Business Insider India - August 31st, 2024
- Study reveals the benefits and downside of fasting - MIT News - August 27th, 2024
- Scilex Holding Company Announces the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Will Be Issuing New ELYXYB® Patent Related to the Treatment of Acute Pain - August 22nd, 2024
- Oragenics Inc. Completes Spray Dry Drug Manufacturing and Intranasal Device Filling in Anticipation of Phase IIa Clinical Trial in Concussed Patients - August 22nd, 2024
- Orion Corporation: Managers’ transactions – Niclas Lindstedt - August 22nd, 2024
- PharmaTher’s Sairiyo Therapeutics Announces Independent Screening Identifying Cepharanthine’s Potential to Bind to Monkeypox (Mpox) Proteins - August 22nd, 2024
- BRIGHT GREEN EMBARKS ON MAJOR PARTNERSHIP WITH BENUVIA PHARMACEUTICALS. WILL SUPPLY PHARMA EXPERT WITH AMERICAN MADE RAW MATERIALS FROM ITS INDUSTRY... - August 22nd, 2024
- Eyenovia Announces Pricing of $5.14 Million Public Offering - August 22nd, 2024
- Firefly Neuroscience Forms Strategic Partnership with Neurology Consultants of Dallas (NCD) to Enhance Early Detection Efforts and Disease Management... - August 22nd, 2024
- Clearmind Medicine Granted U.S. Patent Approval for Binge Behavior Treatment - August 22nd, 2024
- SIGA Announces New Contract Awarded by U.S. Department of Defense for the Procurement of $9 Million of TPOXX® - August 22nd, 2024
- MDxHealth Reports Q2 and Half Year 2024 Results - August 22nd, 2024
- Bavarian Nordic Receives 440,000 Dose Contract to Supply Smallpox and Mpox Vaccines for Undisclosed European Country - August 22nd, 2024
- Brains Bioceutical Set to Achieve One of the World’s First CEP for Cannabidiol Certification with the European Directorate for the Quality of... - August 22nd, 2024
- Cytek® Biosciences Achieves ISO 13485 Certification at San Diego Reagent Manufacturing Facility - August 22nd, 2024
- Certara to Participate in Upcoming Investor Conferences - August 22nd, 2024
- Orion Corporation: Managers’ transactions – Satu Ahomäki - August 22nd, 2024
- Bavarian Nordic Announces First Half 2024 Results - August 22nd, 2024
- BioCryst to Present at Upcoming Investor Conferences - August 22nd, 2024
- Zymeworks Announces Participation in Upcoming Investor Conferences - August 22nd, 2024
- MediWound Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Provides Company Update - August 14th, 2024
- Viracta Therapeutics Announces Positive Data from the Phase 2 NAVAL-1 Trial, Regulatory Progress, and Updated Nana-val Clinical Development Plan - August 14th, 2024
- Shock Top and Gator Athletics Partner to Introduce First-Ever Craft Beer Sponsorship of the Florida Athletic Department - August 14th, 2024
- IGM Biosciences Announces Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Provides Corporate Update - August 14th, 2024
- Achilles Therapeutics Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Recent Business Updates - August 14th, 2024
- Neumora Therapeutics to Host Key Opinion Leader Roundtable to Discuss the Potential of Navacaprant in Neuropsychiatric Disorders - August 14th, 2024
- Evaxion Announces Business Update and Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results - August 14th, 2024
- Galera Announces Board Approval of Complete Liquidation and Dissolution - August 14th, 2024
- Outlook Therapeutics® Reports Financial Results for Third Quarter Fiscal Year 2024 and Provides Corporate Update - August 14th, 2024
- Viracta Therapeutics Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results and Provides Business Update - August 14th, 2024
- Omega Therapeutics Announces Jennifer Nelson, Ph.D., as Senior Vice President of Research - August 14th, 2024
- CorMedix Inc. Reports Second Quarter and Six Month 2024 Financial Results and Provides Business Update - August 14th, 2024
- Panavance Therapeutics Announces Foundational Publication of Misetionamide (GP-2250) in Ovarian Cancer in the Journal, Cancer Medicine - August 14th, 2024
- Abeona Therapeutics® Announces Appointment of Bernhardt Zeiher, MD, FCCP, FACP, and Eric Crombez, MD to its Board of Directors - August 14th, 2024
- Veralox Therapeutics Announces EMA Orphan Drug Designation for VLX-1005 - August 14th, 2024
- Verrica Pharmaceuticals Announces Positive Preliminary Topline Results from Part 2 of Phase 2 Clinical Study of VP-315, an Investigational Oncolytic... - August 14th, 2024
- Verrica Pharmaceuticals Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results - August 14th, 2024
- Novo Nordisk A/S: Trading in Novo Nordisk shares by board members, executives and associated persons - August 14th, 2024
- Atsena Therapeutics Receives Rare Pediatric Disease Designation from the U.S. FDA for ATSN-201 Gene Therapy to Treat X-linked Retinoschisis - August 14th, 2024
- Aquestive Therapeutics Comments on Recent FDA Approval of Non-Injection-Based Epinephrine Product for the Treatment of Anaphylaxis and Reiterates... - August 14th, 2024
- What Is Stem Cell Therapy? How Does It Work? - ThePrint - August 6th, 2024
- New Study Shows Short-Term Benefits of Stem Cell Therapy for MS Patients, But Long-Term Efficacy Remains Unclear - Managed Healthcare Executive - July 26th, 2024
- Cord Blood Awareness Month: Advantages of cord blood banking, things to keep in mind - Moneycontrol - July 10th, 2024
- Neural Stem Cell Plasticity: Advantages in Therapy for the Injured Central Nervous System - Frontiers - June 28th, 2024
- Harnessing benefits of stem cells for heart regeneration | ASU News - ASU News Now - June 21st, 2024
- 'Didn't know this would be possible': Autistic teen's mom on stem cell therapy benefits - WZTV - May 6th, 2024
- John Cleese says he's been spending 17,000 annually on stem cell therapy to 'buy a few extra years' - Yahoo News UK - April 24th, 2024
- Promethera Bets Liver-Derived Stem Cells Will Offer Benefits In NASH - Scrip - April 24th, 2024
- Stem Cell Therapies: Is This The Future Of Wellness? - Grazia USA - April 20th, 2024
- Signal of Benefit for Stem Cell Therapy in Progressive MS - Medscape - March 7th, 2024
- The Controversies Surrounding Stem Cell Therapy for Autism - The Portugal News - February 24th, 2024
- Benefits of Stem Cell Therapy - News Channel 5 Nashville - February 7th, 2024
- What is Stem Cell Therapy & How It Helps Others - Publicist Paper - January 31st, 2024
- A guide to stem cell therapy in Thailand - Thaiger - January 4th, 2024
- Half of pediatric patients with aHUS benefit from Soliris after... - AHUS News - December 21st, 2023
- Real world analysis on the determinants of survival in primary ... - Nature.com - December 5th, 2023
- The Best Beauty Gifts According To People Who Really Know Skin Care - HuffPost - December 5th, 2023
- The Eyepopping Factory Construction Boom in the US - WOLF STREET - December 3rd, 2023
- Benefit of Neoadjuvant Therapy Illustrated During ESMO Congress ... - Targeted Oncology - December 1st, 2023
- Benefits Outweigh Risks as FDA Inspects CAR-T Cell Therapy ... - Curetoday.com - December 1st, 2023
- Review What Real Cavityn Customers Say About Benefits and Side ... - Seattle Weekly - December 1st, 2023
- 'There is a Scientific Fraud Epidemic' - Slashdot - Slashdot - December 1st, 2023
- 15 Best Hydrating Serums to Soothe Any Skin Type 2023 - Town & Country - December 1st, 2023
- Innovations in Cosmetic Dermatology: A Glimpse into the Future - APN News - December 1st, 2023
- FDA Probes New Cases of Cancer That May Stem From Cancer Cell ... - MedCity News - November 29th, 2023
- Use of plant stem cells in topical formulations on the rise - CosmeticsDesign.com USA - November 29th, 2023
- Stem cell-based treatment controls blood sugar in people with Type ... - EurekAlert - November 29th, 2023
- Biologics Market is projected to grow at a CAGR of 8.5% by 2034: Visiongain - Yahoo Finance - November 29th, 2023
- Scientists devise new technique that can pinpoint the causes and ... - EurekAlert - November 29th, 2023
- Global Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products Market is on the brink ... - PharmiWeb.com - November 29th, 2023
- Introducing Orgavalue - The 2023 EIT InnoStars Awards winner - EU-Startups - November 29th, 2023
- Episode 160: Euan Ashley discusses precision medicine and the ... - IHMC - November 29th, 2023
Recent Comments