Deafness Research UK excited about gene therapy
breakthrough
Editor: Here's some exciting news regarding a gene therapy breakthrough
from the UK. It sounds promising, but I want to caution readers that, in
the opinion of most experts, any commercial application of this technology
is still a long ways away!
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September 2008
Research published this week in the journal Nature gives millions of
deaf and hard of hearing people new hope of new gene or drug treatments
for deafness and has been welcomed as a significant breakthrough by the
country's only medical research charity for deaf people, Deafness Research
UK.
Deafness Research UK Research Advisory Panel member, Professor Guy
Richardson, praised the work as "a technical tour de force, and very
convincing proof of the principle that gene therapy could, at least in
certain cases, be used to cure deafness".
There are nine million deaf and hard of hearing people in the UK and in
most cases deafness results from loss of sensory cells in the inner ear
known as "hair" cells. The cells can be damaged and lost through ageing,
noise, genetic defects and certain drugs and, because the cells don't
regenerate, the result is progressive - and irreversible - hearing loss.
Damage to these cells can also lead to tinnitus which affects around 5
million people in the UK.
The latest research, by a team at the Oregon Health & Science
University, shows that a key gene known as Atoh1 (also known as Math1) can
not only cause cells to develop into hair cells but that these cells
function like normal hair cells.
Vivienne Michael, Chief Executive of Deafness Research UK said: "This
is an important and exciting step along the road towards an effective
medical treatment for deafness. Deafness Research UK has a long history of
supporting research into the repair and regeneration of the sensory cells
in the inner ear, including work on the Atoh1 gene and on the use of stem
cells to restore hearing. We will continue to work towards getting a cure
for unwanted deafness into the clinic."
John Brigande, Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology at the Oregon
Hearing Research Center in the OHSU School of Medicine said "Our work
shows that it is possible to produce functional auditory hair cells in the
mammalian cochlea."
Brigande and colleagues were able to produce hair cells by transferring
a key gene called Atoh1 (also known as Math-1) into 'progenitor' cells in
the inner ear of developing mice. This type of cell becomes specialised to
perform different functions during development, according to the
instructions they receive from genes. The gene Atoh1 is known to turn
progenitor cells into hair cells, but it was not previously known whether
the hair cells would work normally if Atoh1 was introduced artificially.
To find out, the team inserted Atoh1 into progenitor cells along with a
fluorescent protein molecule that is often used in research as a marker,
to make cells easily visible. They were then able to see that the gene
transfer technique resulted in mice being born with more hair cells in the
cochlea than are normally found.
Crucially, Dr. Anthony Ricci, Associate Professor of Otolaryngology at
the Stanford University School of Medicine, demonstrated that the
gene-treated hair cells function like ordinary hair cells.
Stem cells are a type of progenitor and so can be instructed by genes
to become a specific cell-type. One obstacle in the way of stem cell
research has been ethical objection to the use of embryonic stem cells.
However, researchers at Sheffield University supported by Deafness
Research UK are currently working on extracting stem cells from the bone
marrow and blood that are found in the umbilical cord, with the aim of
turning them into hair cells that could be inserted into the cochlea. The
umbilical cells are in rich supply and avoid the ethical issues
surrounding the embryonic cells.