After 25 Years, Researchers Uncover Genetic Cause of Rare Neurological Disease

After 25 Years, Researchers Uncover Genetic Cause of Rare Neurological Disease

Intriguingly, something similar seems to be happening in another form of ataxia, SCA2, which also interferes with protein recycling. The researchers are currently testing a potential therapy for SCA2 in clinical trials, and the similarities between the two conditions raise the possibility that the treatment might benefit patients with SCA4 as well. 
 
Finding the genetic change that leads to SCA4 is essential to develop better treatments, Pulst says. “The only step to really improve the life of patients with inherited disease is to find out what the primary cause is. We now can attack the effects of this mutation potentially at multiple levels.”
 
But while treatments will take a long time to develop, simply knowing the cause of the disease can be incredibly valuable for families affected by SCA4, says Figueroa, the first author on the study. People in affected families can learn whether they have the disease-causing genetic change or not, which can help inform life decisions such as family planning. “They can come and get tested and they can have an answer, for better or for worse,” Figueroa says.
 
The researchers emphasize that their discoveries would not have been possible without the generosity of SCA4 patients and their families, whose sharing of family records and biological samples allowed them to compare the DNA of affected and unaffected individuals. “Different branches of the family opened up not just their homes but their history to us,” Figueroa says. Family records were complete enough that the researchers were able to trace the origins of the disease in Utah back through history to a pioneer couple who moved to Salt Lake Valley in the 1840s.
 
Since meeting so many families with the disease, studying SCA4 has become a personal quest, Figueroa adds. “I’ve been working on SCA4 directly since 2010 when the first family approached me, and once you go to their homes and get to know them, they’re no longer the number on the DNA vial. These are people you see every day… You can’t walk away. This is not just science. This is somebody’s life.”
 
# # # 
This research was published in Nature Genetics as “GGC expansion in ZFHX3 causes SCA4 and impairs autophagy.”
 
This work was performed in collaboration with researchers from University of Tübingen, University of Lübeck and Kiel University, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Albany, NY.
 
The study was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke of the National Institutes of Health under award number R35127253 and the DFG-funded INST 37/1049-1.

link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *