
Thursday, May 20 1999
Science in Brief
Studies With Mice Show Promise for New Huntington's Disease Treatment
Studies in mice may lead to a new treatment for Huntington's disease, Harvard researchers
report in today's issue of the journal Nature. The disease is known to be caused by a
defect in the gene that is the blueprint for a protein called huntingtin, but scientists
are not sure how the defect produces the disease. Mice with the defective gene develop
Huntington's symptoms. Dr. Robert M. Friedlander and his Harvard colleagues have found
that blocking the action of another enzyme, called caspase-1, sharply slows disease
progression and death in mice. Caspase-1 is involved in apoptosis, or programmed cell
death. Friedlander speculates that drugs blocking the effects of caspase-1 could delay
disease progression in humans as well.
Compiled by Times medical writer Thomas H. Maugh II
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