Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Gene therapy leads to long-term benefits in dog model of devastating childhood disease

06.07.17 | Wiley

GQ GMC-500Plus Geiger Counter

GQ GMC-500Plus Geiger Counter logs beta, gamma, and X-ray levels for environmental monitoring, training labs, and safety demonstrations.

Researchers who previously showed that a gene therapy treatment could save the lives of dogs with a deadly disease called myotubular myopathy--a type of muscular dystrophy that affects the skeletal muscles--have found that the therapy is long-lasting. The results support a clinical trial in patients.

Myotubular myopathy is estimated to affect 1 in 50,000 male births, and boys born with the condition often die in the first year of life.

In this latest study, investigators found that replacing the MTM1 gene, which is mutated in patients, leads to sustained preservation of muscle strength and neurologic function in dogs over 4 years.

"This regenerative technology, termed AAV gene transfer, provided long-lasting benefit to the entire musculature of affected dogs that would have otherwise perished, extending a healthy lifespan for more than 4 years," said Dr. Martin Childers, senior author of the Muscle & Nerve study and a UW Medicine researcher in Seattle.

###

Muscle & Nerve

10.1002/mus.25658

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Wiley. (2017, June 7). Gene therapy leads to long-term benefits in dog model of devastating childhood disease. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LD5ZXEKL/gene-therapy-leads-to-long-term-benefits-in-dog-model-of-devastating-childhood-disease.html
MLA:
"Gene therapy leads to long-term benefits in dog model of devastating childhood disease." Brightsurf News, Jun. 7 2017, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LD5ZXEKL/gene-therapy-leads-to-long-term-benefits-in-dog-model-of-devastating-childhood-disease.html.