Israeli researchers have found protection from Parkinson's disease
The research is an outgrowth of Lev's doctoral thesis, which identified genes that increase the chances of developing Parkinson's. She focused on a gene called DJ-1, which bolsters the cell's own defense mechanisms. Various studies have shown that mutations of this gene correlate with an increased risk of Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis and neurological complications associated with diabetes.
As a result, the researchers concluded that to protect nerve cells, a drug would have to be developed that mimicked the DJ-1 gene. During the research, a peptide (short protein ) was identified that attaches itself to another peptide, so that it can penetrate the brain-blood barrier and enter the system of nerves that produce dopamine; that protein then protects those nerve cells. The protein, which the researchers called NID-13, has been checked over the past three years in lab mice engineered to exhibit symptoms of Parkinson's. The findings show that it is effective.
The researchers have registered a patent for the protein and are now working to get the findings published in the medical literature. "Our ability to 'correct' the level of DJ-1 was important, because Parkinson's usually presents itself after such a massive destruction of nerve cells that there are not enough cells remaining to compensate for those that died," explained Lev. "We have a relatively long time to intervene and administer a drug treatment that will prevent cell death.
Quality of life restored
"When we succeed in protecting the nerve cells and preventing their gradual death, the patients will have their quality of life restored," she said. The mice in the Tel Aviv study received the protein by subcutaneous injection; it is likely to be administered in humans by injection as well, at least at first, to avoid having the digestive system break it down. However, medical science has already developed ways to administer proteins in pills, nasal sprays or patches.
Parkinson's is diagnosed in about 1 percent of the population over 65, and is the second most common degenerative brain disease after Alzheimer's. A study released in 2011 by Tel Aviv and Haifa universities and Maccabi Health Services indicated that some 25,000 Israelis suffer from Parkinson's. That study also showed that the frequency of Parkinson's had gone up 50 percent in a decade (1998-2007 ), occurring 256 times in every 100,000 people.
Throughout the world there are other studies being done to crack the Parkinson's riddle and develop a treatment based on the genetic makeup of the disease. In October 2010 an international team of researchers managed by Harvard that included Technion researchers reported identifying a group of genes connected to the development of Parkinson's, as well as a protein called PGC-1 alpha that could be used as a treatment for the disease.
In 2006, a drug called Azilect, developed by Teva Pharmaceuticals and researchers at the Technion, was approved for use as a treatment for symptoms of Parkinson's. Teva had tried to get approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to also market Azilect as a drug that slows down the underlying disease. But an FDA panel ruled this past October that Azilect had not been proven to have any disease-modification effect.
By Dan Even