Wednesday, 26 June 2013

No Danger Of Cancer Through Gene Therapy Virus

In fall 2012, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approved the modified adeno-associated virus AAV-LPL S447X as the first ever gene therapy for clinical use in the Western world. uniQure, a Dutch biotech company, had developed AAV-LPL S447X for the treatment of a rare inherited metabolic disease called lipoprotein lipase deficiency (LPLD) which affects approximately one or two out of one million people. The disease causes severe, life-threatening inflammations of the pancreas. Afflicted individuals carry a defect in the gene coding for the lipoprotein lipase enzyme which is necessary for breakdown of fatty acids. AAV-LPLS447X shall be used as a viral vector to deliver an intact gene copy to affected cells.

The viruses modified for gene therapy cannot integrate their DNA into the host cell genome, because they lack a particular enzyme needed for this. Nevertheless, integration may happen occasionally. "We had to exclude that AAV-LPLS447X tends to integrate at sites in the genome where this integration might activate cancer-promoting genes. This is exactly what had been observed with a virus used for gene therapy," says Dr. Manfred Schmidt, a molecular biologist. Schmidt leads a research group at NCT Heidelberg and DKFZ that studies the safety of gene-therapeutic methods.

In collaboration with scientists from uniQure, the Heidelberg researchers analyzed the genome of five LPLD patients who had been treated with AAV-LPLS447X . In addition, they also studied mice following intramuscular or intravenous administration of the therapeutic virus.

The analysis of 15 million individual genomes of five treated patients showed, as expected, that AAV-LPLS447X rarely integrates into the genome of the host cells (fewer than 1 out of 1,000 AAV-LPLS447X particles). In most cases, the viral genome persists in the cytoplasm as a separate structure. If it is integrated, this happens at random sites. The researchers did not find any tendency for integration at particular sites in the genome.

Christine Kaeppel and Raffaele Fronza, first authors of the article, were very surprised to discover the AAV-LPLS447X genome in the so-called mitochondrial genome. Mitochondria are tiny membrane-enclosed structures that generate energy for the cell. They are the only cellular component aside from the nucleus containing DNA. "An adeno-associated virus has never before been observed to integrate into the mitochondrial genome on its own," reported the scientists.

"For the first time, we have thoroughly analyzed in AAV-treated patients whether and where the viral genome integrates. Now we can regard AAV-LPLS447X as safe. Those few cases where we have observed integration of viral DNA in muscle cells are barely relevant in view of all the reconstructions and rearrangements that are permanently taking place in our DNA anyway," says study director Schmidt.

AAV-LPLS447X is considered to be a prototype vector for gene therapy. "If AAV-LPLS447X stands the test, other gene therapies against more common diseases such as Huntington's disease or Parkinson's might also become possible," says Schmidt. In addition, a growing number of diseases have been found to be linked to alterations in mitochondrial genes. The newly discovered property of the AAV vector might also prove useful for correcting genetic defects in human mitochondrial DNA.

Source: Medicalnewstoday.com

Friday, 7 June 2013

Fighting Cancer One Step at a Time: 2,200 Miles in Less than 46 Days



Lazarex Cancer Foundation: Marathon Maniac’s Attempt to Break the World Record Hiking the Appalachian Trail to Help Cancer Patients

(Danville, Calif.)Lazarex Cancer Foundation’s Team for Life runner, David Wingard, is proud to be a maniac. Having earned the “Marathon Maniac” designation for endurance running (31 marathons and four ultra-marathons in 2012 alone), Wingard is going the distance with Lazarex Cancer Foundation with a staggering marathon schedule in 2013 to raise funds for cancer patients and their families. Endurance running is not only Wingard’s way of fighting cancer; it’s preparing him for his biggest challenge yet. In June of 2014, David Wingard will attempt to set the fastest time for hiking the Appalachian Trail, requiring him to trek 48 miles per day for more than six weeks straight.
                                        
Wingard, a 62 year-old carpenter from South Carolina, lost his wife to Melanoma in 2009 and has teamed up with the Lazarex Cancer Foundation to raise awareness and support for cancer patients.  His campaign to break the record in hiking the Appalachian Trail begins at the San Francisco Marathon, June 16, 2013 and can be tracked at www.RunDavidRun.org.

“A marathon’s 26.2 miles or the Appalachian Trail’s roughly 2,200 miles is nothing compared to the journey a cancer patient will encounter,” says Wingard. “This trek is a way for me to give back, help others and bring awareness to what we can do as individuals to fight this disease that has touched so many of us.”

Lazarex Cancer Foundation’s Team for Life program enables athletes to participate in endurance events on an official team, or create their own fundraising event that directly supports cancer patients.  Some team members, like Wingard, run or swim, while others create jewelry to support the organization and the cancer patients they serve.

“We strive to bridge the gap for cancer patients who have been told they are out of options but who aren’t done fighting the disease,” says Lazarex President & Founder Dana Dornsife. “David’s heroic trek helps raise awareness about our mission, and the importance of clinical trials as a treatment option, while raising funds that will help [Lazarex Cancer Foundation] directly reimburse cancer patients for costs associated with their clinical trial participation.”

For information about David Wingard’s trek, donations, ways to get involved and more on Lazarex Cancer Foundation or Team for Life, visit www.RunDavidRun.org. Follow the campaign on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/OfficialDavidWingard.

About Lazarex Cancer Foundation
Lazarex Cancer Foundation supports all end stage cancer patients and the cancer community by providing assistance with costs for clinical trial participation, navigation through clinical trial options, and community outreach and education. Lazarex provides resources to fill the gap that exists from the time a patient is told there is no more hope and when they are truly done with their journey in life.”