Therapeutics development for spinal muscular atrophy

CJ Sumner - NeuroRx, 2006 - Springer
NeuroRx, 2006Springer
Spinal muscular atrophy is an autosomal recessive motor neuron disease that is the leading
inherited cause of infant and early childhood mortality. Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by
mutation of the telomeric copy of the survival motor neuron gene (SMN1), but all patients
retain a centromeric copy of the gene, SMN2. SMN2 produces reduced amounts of full-
length SMN mRNA, and spinal muscular atrophy likely results from insufficient levels of SMN
protein in motor neurons. The SMN protein plays a well-established role in assembly of the …
Summary
Spinal muscular atrophy is an autosomal recessive motor neuron disease that is the leading inherited cause of infant and early childhood mortality. Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by mutation of the telomeric copy of the survival motor neuron gene (SMN1), but all patients retain a centromeric copy of the gene,SMN2. SMN2 produces reduced amounts of full-length SMN mRNA, and spinal muscular atrophy likely results from insufficient levels of SMN protein in motor neurons. The SMN protein plays a well-established role in assembly of the spliceosome and may also mediate mRNA trafficking in the axon and nerve terminus of neurons. In patients, spinal muscular atrophy disease severity correlates inversely with increasedSMN2 gene copy number and, in transgenic mice lacking endogenous SMN, increasingSMN2 gene copy number from two to eight prevents the SMA disease phenotype. These observations suggest that increasing SMN expression levels may be beneficial to SMA patients. Currently pursued therapeutic strategies for SMA include induction ofSMN2 gene expression, modulation of splicing ofSMN2-derived transcripts, stabilization of SMN protein, neuroprotection of SMN deficit neurons, andSMN1 gene replacement. Early clinical trials of candidate therapeutics are now ongoing in SMA patients. Clinical trials in this disease present a unique set of challenges, including the development of meaningful outcome measures and disease biomarkers.
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