July
5, 2006
Variations in 'Detox' Enzymes Linked to ALS, Strengthening ALS-Gulf War Link
TUCSON, Ariz., July 5, 2006 —
Genetically determined variations
in enzymes required to handle toxins
like pesticides, nerve gas and anti-nerve
gas medications appear to increase
susceptibility to amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease),
the Muscular Dystrophy Association
announced today.
Two sets of findings, published online
today in the journal Neurology, point
to variations in enzymes known as
paraoxonases, or PONs, as ALS risk
factors, strengthening a previously
proposed link between ALS and service
in the Gulf War (1990-1991).
Veterans of that war appear to have
about twice the expected risk of developing
ALS, and many were exposed to pesticides
such as DEET through direct skin applications
or the wearing of pesticide-containing
collars. Nerve gas exposures occurred
among military personnel involved
in destroying nerve gas storage areas
and involved relatively few people,
but many more troops took medication
aimed at warding off the effects of
an anticipated nerve gas attack.
"Finding that the PON gene and
enzyme variations and ALS are correlated
provides a missing link between genetic
predisposition and environmental toxins,"
said Sharon Hesterlee, MDA's Research
Development Director. "That's
been suspected for a long time but
never actually substantiated in this
disease until now."
One of today's online publications,
from the laboratory of neuroscientist
Teepu Siddique at Northwestern University
in Chicago as well as from Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tenn., and
Duke University in Durham, N.C., is
based on a study of 1,891 North Americans
with and without ALS.
Mohammad Saeed and colleagues, including
neurologist Robert Sufit, who directs
the MDA neuromuscular disease clinic
at Northwestern, identified a DNA
sequence on chromosome 7 that lies
between the genes for the enzymes
PON2 and PON3 that appears associated
with the risk of developing ALS. "The
signal is from the intergenic [between
genes] region, so the biology has
yet to be clarified," Siddique
said. He noted that the PON2 enzyme
is known to be present in the nervous
system.
In 450 of the North American cases,
the genes of the ALS-affected person
were compared with those of both unaffected
parents or one unaffected sibling,
to minimize interference from genetic
background noise arising from ethnic
differences.
In the other study, MDA grantee Denise
Figlewicz at the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor along with researchers
at Jagiellonian University in Krakow,
Poland, identified a specific variant
in the PON1 enzyme and another variant
in the PON2 enzyme that, when combined,
were 3.4 times more prevalent in the
ALS patients.
The Polish sample included 185 people
with ALS and 437 unaffected participants,
all of Eastern European Caucasian
origin.
Figlewicz said she "immediately
sat up" when she saw the first
set of data.
"This was a small sample size
from a genetically isolated population,
and to get such a statistically significant
effect is a sign that you may be looking
at something important," she
said. "And a gene, or family
of genes, already implicated in the
Gulf War syndrome is certainly the
kind of candidate you pay attention
to."
In 1999, epidemiologist Robert Haley
and colleagues correlated having the
PON1 variant with the development
of Gulf War-associated neurologic
syndromes (symptoms groups).
ALS begins insidiously, usually in
late middle age, with weakness in
a leg, arm or the mouth and throat
muscles, and progresses rapidly to
complete paralysis of the voluntary
muscles, including those controlling
breathing. Death usually occurs within
three to five years.
Ten percent of ALS cases are clearly
inherited. For the other 90 percent,
the causes remain unknown, although
a combination of genetic predisposition
and environmental exposures has been
proposed.
MDA (www.mda.org) is a voluntary
health agency working to defeat more
than 40 neuromuscular diseases through
programs of worldwide research, comprehensive
services and far-reaching professional
and public health education.
It operates 235 neuromuscular disease
clinics, of which 37 are ALS-specific
research and care centers, throughout
the United States.
In 2006, MDA allocated some $7 million
to ALS research and another $10 million
for ALS health care services. Since
its inception, the Association's expenditures
for ALS research and services have
exceeded $190 million.
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