For thousands of women around the globe carrying a mitochondrial
disease, having a healthy child can be a gamble. This set of diseases
affect mitochondria, tiny powerhouses that generate energy in the body's
cells and are passed exclusively from mother to child.
Women wishing to prevent their children from inheriting mitochondrial diseases have typically relied on preimplantation genetic diagnosis to pick the healthiest embryos, but that is no guarantee of having a healthy baby.
Now, researchers at Salk Institute have developed a simple technique to eliminate mitochondrial mutations
from eggs or early embryos, which has the potential to prevent babies
from inheriting mitochondrial diseases. Their approach is described in
the April 23, 2015 issue of Cell.
"Currently, there are no treatments for mitochondrial diseases," says
senior author Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, professor in Salk's Gene
Expression Laboratory and holder of the Roger Guillemin Chair. "Our
technology may offer new hope for mitochondrial disease carriers wishing to have children without the disease."
Living cells can have hundreds—or even thousands—of mitochondria,
each of which contains their own DNA, a small collection of 37 genes
that are essential for the organelle's function. Mutations in these
crucial genes can cause a wide range of diseases and can lead to
fatality at birth, a life expectancy of only a few years or devastating
symptoms for decades.
"Most current approaches are trying to develop treatments for
patients who are already suffering from these diseases," says Alejandro
Ocampo, a research associate in Izpisua Belmonte's lab and one of the
first authors of the paper. "Instead, we thought of preventing the
transmission of these mutations early in development."
Izpisua Belmonte and his colleagues turned to two types of molecules:
restriction endonucleases and transcription activator-like effector
nucleases (TALENs). These nucleases can be engineered to cut specific
strands of DNA, functioning as a type of molecular "scissors." The Salk
team designed nucleases to cut only mitochondrial DNA that contained
specific, disease-causing mutations in eggs or embryos, leaving healthy
mitochondria intact.
"We might not be able to eliminate one hundred percent of the mutated
copies of mitochondrial DNA," says Pradeep Reddy, another research
associate in the Izpisua Belmonte lab and first author of the new paper.
"But you don't need to eliminate all of the mutated copies: just
reducing the percentage significantly enough can prevent the disease in
the next generation."
As proof of concept, the scientists, using mice containing two types
of mitochondrial DNA, selectively prevented the transmission of one of
the types to the next generation using specific nucleases in both eggs
and one-cell embryos. Baby mice generated by this approach developed
normally to adulthood. In addition, this method let the researchers
successfully reduce the levels of mutated mitochondrial DNA responsible
for two human mitochondrial diseases.
In the United Kingdom, lawmakers have recently approved the use of
another technology known as mitochondrial replacement to prevent the
transmission of mitochondrial diseases. This technology is based on the
transfer of the nuclear genome from one patient's embryo into donor
embryos with healthy mitochondria. "The clinical application of our
technique does not require donor eggs," says Ocampo. "We are just
performing a single injection into the patient's egg or one-cell embryo,
which is technically easier than mitochondrial replacement."
Izpisua Belmonte and colleagues are now investigating the possibility
of translating this technology to the clinic in human eggs and embryos.
SOURCE:
Medicalxpress and Provided by
Salk Institute



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