Why does regeneration fail in cerebral X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy?
Christine Stadelmann – University Medical Center, Göttingen, Germany – ELA2020-016I4
Description of the project
X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is a genetic disease affecting mostly young male patients. In its severest form, patients develop a fulminant inflammatory destruction of central nervous system white matter, areas where all descending nerve fiber tracts are contained. Untreated, patients suffering from this disease mostly die within months to few years. The only effective therapy for halting the progression is an early transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells. Though progression often can be stopped this way, any disability that patients had accumulated before treatment recovers very poorly. This is in harsh contrast to another inflammatory disease affecting the white matter, multiple sclerosis. Here, patients often recover very well after an inflammatory and demyelinating bout. The reasons for this difference are not yet understood.
In this project, the team strive to investigate the reasons underlying the apparent lack of regeneration in X-ALD. They will use autopsy tissue from human patients who died of X-ALD as a starting point and let their research be guided by a careful re-examination of pathologic changes in this tissue. In addition, they will use novel proteome and transcriptome techniques that allow a very detailed investigation of molecular alterations in the tissue. In this way the researchers strive to identify novel molecular and cellular pathways of the disease that could be manipulated in order to improve clinical recovery in X-ALD. Furthermore, in their novel detailed analysis of the human histopathology they hope to provide a valuable tool also for other researchers working in the field.
Project financed by ELA up to: 72 375 €
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