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Lysosomal Storage Disorders PDF

562 Pages·2007·8.02 MB·English
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Lysosomal Storage Disorders Lysosomal Storage Disorders Jo hn A. Barranger, M.D., Ph.D. Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar, M.D. John A. Barranger, MD, PhD Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar, MD Department of Human Genetics Genzyme Corporation University of Pittsburgh Framingham, MA 01701–9322 Pittsburgh, PA 15261 USA USA To all those colleagues and friends who made this text as good as it is, I remain in debt. Thank you for your thoughtful contributions. John A. Barranger To my parents Jorge and Sonia and Luis Antonio, my grandfather; a teacher who mastered the science of educating generations. Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar To all patients with lysosomal storage disorders, thank you for all the lessons given to us Preface Scientific progress has been rapid in lysosomal biology during the last six decades. Its application to human disease is nothing less than spectacular. In no other group of disorders has knowledge and clinical utility progressed so speedily. Recall that the organelle was described in just 1955. Since then, the biochemical alterations and storage materials were described, the enzyme deficiencies discovered, the gene coding of these glycoproteins cloned and thousands of mutations defined. These advances have resulted in highly improved diagnosis for more than 50 diseases. For five diseases, including the most common lysosomal storage disorder, molecular therapy is a reality, extremely effective and very safe. This higher plateau of medical approaches to human disease is something to which all translational scientists aspire and only a few actually witness. The relief of pain and suffering is a tribute to the ideas and work of many dedicated investigators. Much of that work is presented in this text. Despite our ability to treat some of these diseases through enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) and, accurately define different diseases that look alike, there is much to be learned about lysosomal disease. With each step up the barrier to knowledge, a new point of view is attained, a fresh perspective. Much is seen more clearly and many “allegories of the cave” are dispelled forever. Yet, our new view demands a new vision drawing us to find better definitions of what we see. This is how it has been with lysosomal diseases. No sooner had the little vesicle been described when a defect in it was shown to cause a human disease. With each advance came the hope for better diagnosis and visions of therapy. Nowhere was its value more evident than in the clear separation of the mucopoly- saccharidoses into reliable diagnostic categories according to the enzyme that was deficient in them. Long-standing debates and controversies were settled forever. Still though, as in all lysosomal storage disease, what makes the difference in the spectrum of iduronidase deficient disease from severe Hurler syndrome to mild Scheie disease remains to be defined. There is no doubt that multiple genes are involved in these complex diseases. Just when we thought that they were monogeneic, whole new visions of the diseases have emerged. One even suggests that lysosomal storage may not be the primary pathogenetic step, but rather, protesomal activation in an attempt to rid the cell of improperly folded lysosomal enzyme. The universality of this theory remains to be demonstrated. However, this new approach may provide another tool in the physician’s bag to define and treat disease. It is with this enthusiasm that we should look forward to new definitions of the lysosome and lysosomal disease. This text provides a thoughtful intro- duction to a wide variety of data, concepts, and approaches to lysosomal storage disorders. John A. Barranger University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA May 2007 Contents Preface ..............................................................................................................................vii Contributors ..................................................................................................................... xiii Chapter 1. From Lysosomes to Storage Diseases and Back: A Personal Reminiscence ..............................................................................1 Christian de Duve Chapter 2. Lysosomal Biogenesis and Disease ...............................................................7 Doug Brooks and Emma Parkinson-Lawrence Chapter 3. The Concept of Treatment in Lysosomal Storage Diseases ........................37 Roscoe O. Brady Chapter 4. Complex Lipid Catabolism .........................................................................45 Roscoe O. Brady and Roscoe O. Brady, Jr. Chapter 5. Retroviral Vectors for Gene Therapy ..........................................................53 Seon-Hee Kim and Paul D. Robbins Chapter 6. Adenovirus in Gene Therapy ......................................................................69 Angela Montecalvo, Andrea Gambotto, and Leonardo D’Aiuto Chapter 7. Setting Back the Clock: Adenoviral-Mediated Gene Therapy for Lysosomal Storage Disorders ................................................................81 Dolan Sondhi, Neil R. Hackett, Stephen M. Kaminksy, and Ronald G. Crystal Chapter 8. Adeno-Associated Viral-Mediated Gene Therapy of Lysosomal Storage Disorders ........................................................................................97 Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar and Seng H. Cheng Chapter 9. Herpes Simplex Virus Vectors for Gene Therapy of Lysosomal Storage Disorders ......................................................................................111 Edward A. Burton and Joseph C. Glorioso x Contents Chapter 10. Gene Therapy of Lysosomal Storage Disorders by Lentiviral Vectors ......................................................................................133 Alessandra Biffi and Luigi Naldini Chapter 11. Substrate Reduction Therapy .....................................................................153 Frances M. Platt and Terry D. Butters Chapter 12. Newborn Screening for Lysosomal Storage Disorders .............................169 C. Ronald Scott, Frantisek Turecek, and Michael H. Gelb Chapter 13. Genetic Counseling for Lysosomal Storage Diseases ...............................179 Erin O’Rourke, Dawn Laney, Cindy Morgan, Kim Mooney, and Jennifer Sullivan Chapter 14. Neural Stem Cell Therapy in Lysosomal Storage Disorders ....................197 Jean-Pyo Lee, Dan Clark, Mylvaganam Jeyakumar, Rodolfo Gonzalez, Scott Mckercher, Franz-Josef Muller, Rahul Jandial, Rosanne M. Taylor, Kook In Park, Thomas N. Seyfried, Frances M. Platt, and Evan Y. Snyder Chapter 15. The GM1 Gangliosidoses ..........................................................................217 Gustavo Charria-Ortiz Chapter 16. The GM2 Gangliosidoses ..........................................................................229 Gustavo A. Charria-Ortiz Chapter 17. Acid Sphingomyelinase-Deficient Niemann–Pick Disease ......................257 Edward H. Schuchmann, Margaret Mc Govern, Calogera M. Simonaro, Melissa P. Wasserstein, and Robert J. Desnick Chapter 18. Krabbe Disease (Globoid Cell Leukodystrophy) ......................................269 Junko Matsuda and Kunihiko Suzuki Chapter 19. Metachromatic Leukodystrophy ................................................................285 Volkmar Gieselmann Chapter 20. Fabry Disease ............................................................................................307 Roscoe O. Brady Chapter 21. Gaucher Disease: Review and Perspectives on Treatment .......................319 Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar and John A. Barranger Contents xi Chapter 22. Therapeutic Goals in the Treatment of Gaucher Disease ..........................345 Neal Weinreb Chapter 23. The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses: Clinical Features and Molecular Basis of Disease ................................................................371 Beverly L. Davidson, Mario A. Cabrera-Salazar, and David A. Pearce Chapter 24. Mucopolysaccharidosis I ...........................................................................389 Lorne A. Clarke Chapter 25. Mucopolysaccharidosis II (Hunter Syndrome) ..........................................407 Lorne A. Clarke Chapter 26. Sanfilippo Syndrome: Clinical Genetic Diagnosis and Therapies ............415 John J. Hopwood Chapter 27. Mucopolysaccharidosis IV (Morquio Syndrome) ..................................... 433 Shunji Tomatsu, Adriana M. Montaño, Tatsuo Nishioka, and Tadao Orii Chapter 28. Mucopolysaccharidosis Type VI (Maroteaux–Lamy Syndrome) ..................................................................447 J. E. Wraith Chapter 29. Mucopolysaccharidosis Type VII (Sly Disease): Clinical, Genetic Diagnosis and Therapies ...........................................................................457 Denise J. Norato Chapter 30. Pompe Disease-Glycogenosis Type II: Acid Maltase Deficiency ............473 Arnold Reuser and Marian Kroos Chapter 31. Lysosomal Free Sialic Acid Storage Disorders: Salla Disease and ISSD ......................................................................................499 Amanda Helip-Wooley, Robert Kleta, and William A. Gahl Chapter 32. Cystinosis ..................................................................................................513 Robert Kleta, Amanda Helip-Wooley, and William A. Gahl Chapter 33. I-Cell Disease ............................................................................................529 Doug Brooks, Chris Turner, Viv Muller, John Hopwood, and Peter Meikle Index ...............................................................................................................................539 Contributors John A. Barranger Department of Human Genetics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA, xiv Contributors Seng H. Cheng Genetic Diseases Science, Genzyme Corporation, Framingham, MA 01701-9322, USA,

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