Islamabad, Jan 25: Researchers from Mount Sinai School
of Medicine have identified a drug that improves communication between nerve
cells in a mouse model of Phelan-McDermid Syndrome (PMS).
Behavioral
symptoms of PMS fall under the autism spectrum disorder category. The research
will be presented May 21 at the International Meeting for Autism Research
(IMFAR) in Philadelphia.
Previous research has shown that a gene mutation
in the brain called SHANK3 can cause absent or severely delayed language
abilities, intellectual disability, and autism.
Mount Sinai researchers
developed mice with a mutant SHANK3 gene and observed a lapse in communication
between nerve cells in the brain, which can lead to learning problems. This
communication breakdown indicated that the nerve cells were not maturing
properly.
The researchers then injected the mice with a derivative of a
compound called insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF1), which is FDA-approved to
treat growth failure in children. After two weeks of treatment, nerve cell
communication was normal and adaptation of nerve cells to stimulation, a key
part of learning and memory, was restored.
"The result of IGF1 treatment
of these mice is an exciting development on the road to ultimate therapies for
individuals with PMS," said Joseph Buxbaum, PhD, Director of the Seaver Autism
Center for Research and Treatment at Mount Sinai School of Medicine.
"If
these data are further verified in additional preclinical studies, individuals
with a SHANK3 mutation may benefit from treatments with compounds like this
one."
Dr. Buxbaum and his team at the Seaver Autism Center will continue
to evaluate the efficacy of IGF1 in mice. Patrick Hof, MD, Professor of
Neuroscience at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, will specifically evaluate the
effects of the compound on neuroanatomical changes. Additionally, Jacqueline
Crawley, PhD, Senior Investigator at the National Institutes of Health, will
study the effects on behavioral changes in the mice.
The study was
supported by grants from the Seaver Foundation to Dr. Buxbaum, from the Simons
Foundation to Drs. Buxbaum, Crawley, Hof, and Zhou, and from William G. Gibson
and Paulina Rychenkova, PhD, to Dr. Buxbaum.
Ends
SA/EN
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First drug to demonstrate therapeutic effect in a type of autism
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