March
1, 2007
Scientists Develop Vaccines Against ALS Mutations
Investigators in the
laboratory of Jean-Pierre Julien
at Laval University in Quebec have
developed a new way to block abnormal
SOD1 protein molecules, which cause
SOD1-related amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS) .
Although ALS resulting from a mutation
in the SOD1 gene accounts for only
about 1 percent to 3 percent of
all ALS cases, it’s by far
the best understood form of the
disease, and the one on which most
ALS mouse models are based.
In a paper published
online Feb. 2 in Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences,
the scientists describe how they
developed and tested vaccines against
two types of SOD1 abnormalities.
First, they immunized
a group of mice carrying a mutation
known as G37R in their SOD1 genes
by injecting them with abnormal
SOD1 protein molecules along with
a substance that stimulates the
immune system.
Treated mice received
three of these injections a few
weeks apart, while a comparison
(control) group received a salt
solution with the immune system
stimulant. The mice that received
the SOD1 protein molecules lived
an average of a month longer than
those that got the salt injections.
However, when the
scientists tried the same approach,
but with a different type of abnormal
SOD1 (the G93A mutation), in mice
with extremely high levels of mutated
SOD1 protein, the benefit was negligible.
They decided that,
with this type of ALS-affected mouse,
instead of trying “active”
immunization, in which animals mount
their own immune response, they
would try a “passive”
immunization approach, giving the
mice ready-made immune system weapons
known as antibodies, designed specifically
to attack abnormal SOD1. They gave
the antibodies directly into the
nervous system, rather than injecting
them under the skin.
The second approach
prolonged the lives of the treated
G93A mice by a week compared to
a control group, and it significantly
delayed the usual loss of body weight
and impairment of leg function.
The researchers say
the vaccination approach, especially
a passive immunization based on
specific antibody administration,
“merits consideration”
in patients with SOD1-related ALS.
They note that such patients have
much lower levels of mutated SOD1
protein than do the G93A mice used
in these experiments.