Wednesday, July 4, 2012 NIH-funded
study shows cells from different patients have unique drug responses Researchers
have taken a step toward personalized medicine for Parkinson's disease, by
investigating signs of the disease in patient-derived cells and testing how the
cells respond to drug treatments. The study was funded by the National
Institutes of Health. The researchers collected skin cells from patients with
genetically inherited forms of Parkinson’s and reprogrammed those cells into
neurons. They found that neurons derived from individuals with distinct types
of Parkinson's showed common signs of distress and vulnerability — in
particular, abnormalities in the cellular energy factories known as
mitochondria. At the same time, the cells' responses to different treatments
depended on the type of Parkinson's each patient had.
The results were published in Science Translational Medicine. "These findings suggest new
opportunities for clinical trials of Parkinson’s disease, in which cell
reprogramming technology could be used to identify the patients most likely to
respond to a particular intervention," said Margaret Sutherland, Ph.D., a
program director at NIH's National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke (NINDS). A consortium of researchers conducted the study with primary
funding from NINDS. The consortium is led by Ole Isacson, M.D., Ph.D., a
professor of neurology at McLean Hospital and Harvard
Medical School
in Boston . The
NINDS consortium's first goal was to transform the patients' skin cells into
induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, which are adult cells that have been
reprogrammed to behave like embryonic stem cells. The consortium researchers
then used a combination of growth conditions and growth-stimulating molecules
to coax these iPS cells into becoming neurons, including the type that die in
Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's disease affects a number of brain regions,
including a motor control area of the brain called the substantia nigra. There,
it destroys neurons that produce the chemical dopamine. Loss of these neurons
leads to involuntary shaking, slowed movements, muscle stiffness and other
symptoms. Medications can help manage the symptoms, but there is no treatment
to slow or stop the disease. Most cases of Parkinson's are sporadic, meaning
that the cause is unknown. However, genetics plays a strong role. There are 17
regions of the genome with common variations that affect the risk of developing
Parkinson's disease. Researchers have also identified nine genes that, when
mutated, can cause the disease. Dr. Isacson and his collaborators derived iPS
cells from five people with genetic forms of Parkinson's disease. By focusing
on genetic cases, rather than sporadic cases, they hoped they would have a
better chance of seeing patterns in the disease process and in treatment
responses. Three of the individuals had mutations in a gene called LRRK2, and
two others were siblings who had mutations in the gene PINK1. The researchers
also derived iPS cells from two of the siblings' family members who did not
have Parkinson's or any known mutations linked to it. Because prior studies
have suggested that Parkinson's disease involves a breakdown of mitochondrial
function, the researchers looked for signs of impaired mitochondria in
patient-derived neurons. Mitochondria turn oxygen and glucose into cellular
energy. The researchers found that oxygen consumption rates were lower in
patient cells with LRRK2 mutations, and higher in cells with the PINK1
mutation. In PINK1 mutant cells, the researchers also found increased
vulnerability to oxidative stress, a damaging process that in theory can be
counteracted with antioxidants. Next, the researchers tested if neurons derived
from patients and healthy volunteers were vulnerable to a variety of toxins,
including some that target mitochondria. Compared to neurons from healthy
individuals, patient-derived neurons were more likely to become damaged or die
after exposure to mitochondrial toxins. Patient-derived neurons also suffered
more damage from the toxins than did patient-derived skin cells. Next, the
researchers attempted to rescue the toxin-exposed cells with various drug
treatments that have shown promise in animal models of Parkinson's, including
the antioxidant coenzyme Q10 and the immunosuppressant rapamycin. All
patient-derived neurons — whether they carried LRRK2 or
PINK1 mutations — had beneficial responses to coenzyme Q10. However, the patient-derived
neurons differed in their response to rapamycin; the drug helped prevent damage
to neurons with LRRK2 mutations, but it did not protect the neurons with PINK1
mutations. This cluster of human iPS cells has been induced to express neural
proteins, which have been tagged with fluorescent antibodies. Courtesy of Dr.
Ole Isacson, McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical
School . These results
hint that iPS cell technology could be used to help define subgroups of
patients for clinical trials. To date, interventional trials for Parkinson's
disease have not focused on specific groups of patients or forms of the
disease, because there have been few clues to point investigators toward
individualized treatments. Although the current study focused on genetic forms
of Parkinson's, iPS cell technology could be used to define disease mechanisms
and the most promising treatments for sporadic Parkinson's as well. The NINDS
Parkinson's Disease iPS Cell Research Consortium is one of three such consortia
funded by NINDS. One of the consortia is focused on developing iPS cells for
the study of Huntington's disease, and another focuses on amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia. The Huntington's disease
consortium recently reported successful derivation of iPS cells and
iPS-generated neurons from patients. Cells from patients with both early and
later onset disease showed severe defects in physiology, metabolism, and cell
viability, compared to cells from healthy volunteers. These results were reported
in the June 28th issue of Cell Stem Cell. The consortium is led by led by
Leslie Thompson, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and human behavior at the University of California ,
Irvine . Skin cell and iPS cell lines developed by the
consortia are available to both academic and industry researchers through the
NINDS human cell line repository at the Coriell Institute. To date the NINDS
repository has distributed more than 200 cell lines worldwide. The Parkinson's
Disease iPS Cell Research Consortium is funded primarily by grants and
contracts from NINDS (NS070276, NS078338). The three disease consortia were
started in 2009 with more than $11 million in NINDS grants, made possible by
the Recovery Act. Funding for the consortia was recently renewed through 2013 via
a public-private partnership. Future goals include increasing the number of iPS
cell lines and the variety of mutations represented, and giving some lines
biological tags that will enable researchers to see when the cells have
transformed into specific neuronal types. NINDS is funding this next phase in
collaboration with the Michael J. Fox Foundation, the Parkinson's Disease
Foundation, the ALS Association, the Association for Frontotemporal
Degeneration, the CHDI Foundation, the Huntington's Disease Society of America ,
the Hereditary Disease Foundation, and the California Institute for
Regenerative Medicine.
About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH,the nation's medical
research agency,includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.NIH is the primary federal agency
conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical
research,and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common
and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit
http://www.nih.gov.
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