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News from Yahoo News oct. 29, 2007
Gene therapy first for children
with 'Lorenzo's Oil' disorder
PARIS (AFP) - Doctors have for the first time successfully used gene
therapy to treat children with a rare disease of the nervous system
that gained worldwide recognition thanks to the Hollywood movie "Lorenzo's
Oil," a European health group said on Monday.
The
European Association for Leukodystrophy (ELA) said the
breakthrough was unveiled by French researchers at a congress in
Rotterdam, the Netherlands, of the European Society of Gene and Cell
Therapy.
The therapy targeted faulty genes that cause
adrenoloeukodystrophy (ALD), one of a group of inherited
disorders known as leukodystrophies in which the protective myeline
sheath protecting nerve cells in the brain becomes damaged.
The disease, transmitted through the mother, affects little boys,
initially affecting their speech, coordination and socialising, and
leads to progressive dementia and death, usually within a decade
after the onset of symptoms.
A team led by Patrick Aubourg, a professor at the Saint Vincent de
Paul Hospital in Paris, used a harmless version of the AIDS virus as
a Trojan horse, introducing the corrected gene to fix the flawed
chromosome in bone marrow taken from the children.
The bone marrow was then reinjected into the patients.
ALD occurs because a flawed gene on the child's X chromosome does
not produce a key enzyme to break down an accumulation of so-called
very long chain fatty acids in the brain.
Six months after the therapy, the results have been encouraging,
showing a pickup in production of this enzyme, ELA said.
"Lorenzo's Oil," a 1992 drama starring Nick Nolte and Susan Sarendon,
shows the dogged bid of two parents to devise an oil with fatty
acids that can block myelin destruction.
From:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071029/hl_afp/healthdiseasechildrenbiotech_071029165706
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