Breakthrough in
Niemann-Pick Type C
research
reported by Notre Dame and
Cornell scientists
A paper announcing a
breakthrough discovery in the
fight against Niemann-Pick
Type C, coauthored by Olaf
Wiest and Paul Helquist of the
University of Notre Dame's
Department Chemistry &
Biochemistry and Frederick
Maxfield, Chair of
Biochemistry at Cornell
University Weill College of
Medicine, appears in the
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences this
week. The paper shows how use
of a histone deacetylase
inhibitor correct the damage
done by the genetic disorder
and allowed once-diseased
cells to function normally.
Niemann-PickType C (NPC)
involves a genetic flaw that
keeps cells from using lipids
appropriately and leaves the
lipids trapped in the cell.
Brain cells are especially
impacted, and destruction of
brain cells typically kills
victims by their teen years
and there is currently no
treatment available in the U.S.
NPC is an inherited
cholesterol metabolism
disorder that strikes one in
every 150,000 children. It has
been referred to by the
National Institutes of Health
as "childhood Alzheimer's"
because of similarities in the
brains of NPC and Alzheimer's
disease patients.
Three of the four
grandchildren of former Notre
Dame head football coach Ara
Parseghian died of NPC, and
the University has been
involved in research on the
disorder for years. Last year,
it formally united with the
Parseghian Foundation, which
sponsored this work.
Last summer, Notre Dame
College of Science Dean
Gregory Crawford and his wife
Renate bicycled 2,300 miles
from Tucson to Notre Dame to
raise awareness of the newly
strengthened partnership with
the Parseghian Foundation.
Notre Dame's Center for Rare
and Neglected Diseases works
to develop therapies and
outreach efforts for people
suffering from conditions,
like NPC, that have bee3n
largely ignored by
pharmaceutical companies.
A team of led by Wiest and
Helquist at Notre Dame and
Maxfield at Cornell, uncovered
evidence that histone
deacetylase inhibitors correct
NPC's genetic flaw. Detailed
images obtained at Cornell by
Maxfield's group gave vivid
evidence of the drug's
effectiveness, showing how NPC
cells became indistinguishable
from normal human cells after
treatment with the drug. The
histine deacetylase inhibitors
have a wide range of potential
uses, from rare diseases, the
focus at Notre Dame, to
several forms of cancer,
including leukemia, where they
can increase the number of
bone marrow cells.
Several of the compounds
studied are shown to be safe
in advanced clinical studies
of cancer and one compound is
currently approved by the FDA.
"Our biggest single
emphasis the last few years
has been Niemann-Pick among
these rare diseases," Helquist
said. "We developed several
processes for the efficient
preparation of these types of
drugs. There's a stream of
publications and also a stream
of patents starting in June
2007 and continuing this year."
"If the results in human
cells can be confirmed in
clinical trials, the fact that
the histone deacetylase
inhibitors are already in
advanced clinical trials or
even approved drugs could
greatly accelerate the
development of a treatment for
this devastating disease."
###
Contacts: Olaf Wiest,
owiest@nd.edu, Paul
Helquist,phelquis@nd.edu,
Notre Dame; Frederick Maxfield,
frmaxfie@cornell.edu,
Cornell.
E-mail:
info@niemannpick@org.ar
info@npc.org.ar