June
9, 2006
Anti-Enzyme
Compound Prolongs
Survival in ALS-Destined Mice
The laboratory of M. Flint Beal,
an MDA research grantee at Weill Medical
College of Cornell University in New
York, was part of a group that recently
found that mice genetically destined
to develop ALS live longer if they’re
given Ro26-2853 at 1 month of age.
Ro26-2853 is an inhibitor of metalloproteinases
(MMPs), enzymes that digest components
of the gluelike matrix that surrounds
and protects nerve and other cells.
Previous studies have shown that
there are fragmented, widely separated
and possibly “digested”
bundles of this gluelike material
in the spinal cords of people with
ALS.
In the current study, published online
March 2 in Experimental Neurology,
Stefan Lorenzl, with colleagues in
Germany, found that mice with genetic
ALS have higher than normal MMP activity
in their spinal cords.
When the investigators gave Ro26-2853
to 1-month-old mice destined to develop
ALS because of a genetic mutation
but so far not showing symptoms, the
animals lived an average of 13 days
(11 percent) longer than an untreated
group.
However, when they gave the compound
to 3-month-old mice, after ALS symptoms
were already apparent, it didn’t
significantly improve survival time.
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