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Chemical lengthens lives of mice with Lou Gehrig's disease

WASHINGTON (April 13, 2000 2:05 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com) - An
experimental chemical significantly prolonged the lives of mice with Lou
Gehrig's disease by blocking an enzyme crucial for cell death, a finding
that holds promise not just for this killer but for other nervous-system
diseases that afflict millions.

The research at Harvard Medical School may boost efforts already under way
by half a dozen drug companies to create "caspase inhibitors" safe enough
to test in people.

The new findings "provide a compelling argument ... for the value of
caspase inhibitors," Mark Gurney of the Pharmacia Corp., one drugmaker
hunting such compounds, wrote in a review accompanying the research in
Friday's edition of the journal Science.

"The idea is very worthwhile, no question about it," added Cornell
University neurologist Dr. Flint Beal, although he cautioned that human
testing is not yet planned.

Some 30,000 Americans have Lou Gehrig's disease, formally known as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or ALS. No one knows the cause, but it
results in a creeping paralysis as neurons, or nerve cells, in the brain
and spinal cord that control movement are progressively destroyed. On
average, patients die within five years of the first symptoms.

Caspases are enzymes that signal a damaged or worn-out cell to commit
suicide. Scientists now believe that in a variety of brain diseases - from
ALS and Alzheimer's to Parkinson's disease and strokes - caspases that
should be lying dormant inside fairly healthy neurons are somehow activated
to kill them instead.

So if doctors could block caspases' action, they might be able to save
important nerve cells.

Dr. Robert Friedlander of Harvard and Brigham and Women's Hospital tested
mice genetically engineered to get the human version of ALS. He implanted
miniature pumps in their brains to bathe neurons with an experimental
caspase-inhibiting chemical called zVAD-fmk.

Treated mice showed ALS symptoms 20 days later than untreated mice - a long
time in a mouse's lifespan - and they lived 22 percent longer, he reports
in Science.

If humans had a similar result, that would equal another 14 months of life,
said Dr. Leon Charash, medical adviser to the Muscular Dystrophy
Association, which helped fund Friedlander's work. In contrast, the only
ALS drug sold today prolongs survival by about three months.

Would it work in people? Nobody knows, but Friedlander did find some
activated caspase in the spinal cords of ALS patients identical to that in
sick mice, a good sign.

He wants to test zVAD in people, but said manufacturer Enzyme Systems Inc.
fears the chemical - created solely for laboratory, not human, use - could
cause toxic side effec ts. Pharmaceutical companies "are waiting for a
better drug," he said.


Copyright 2000 Nando Media
Copyright 2000 Associated Press
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janet paterson
53 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
a new voice: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/
613 256 8340 PO Box 171 Almonte Ontario Canada K0A 1A0