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Lundbeck part of major advances in the understanding of Parkinson’s disease

Posted: 20 May 2014 | | No comments yet

H. Lundbeck A/S is involved in new research on Parkinson’s disease, which may be the first step towards a new and significantly improved treatment of the debilitating and devastating disease…

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H. Lundbeck A/S (Lundbeck) is involved in new research on Parkinson’s disease, which may be the first step towards a new and significantly improved treatment of the debilitating and devastating disease.
In collaboration with researchers from the University of York, Lundbeck’s researchers have made discoveries in fruit flies with regards to Parkinson’s disease, which is a breakthrough in the understanding of the biological processes that occur in the brain in connection with the disease. The discoveries have just been published in the renowned scientific journal, Human Molecular Genetics.

The researchers have discovered a method that could potentially be used to diagnose the cause of Parkinson’s disease many years before the disease breaks out. At the same time they have found a way in which the cause can be targeted, so that the disease is potentially delayed or never breaks out. Both would be major advances in Parkinson’s disease, where there are still significant unmet treatment needs.

“This new research may prove to be groundbreaking in the understanding and treatment of Parkinson’s disease. Science does not currently have answers for what happens in the brain before and during the disease, but these discoveries may bring us closer to this understanding. This may also give us the opportunity to revolutionize the diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson’s disease, for the benefit of patients and their families,” says Kim Andersen, Senior Vice President, Research at Lundbeck.

Dr. Chris Elliott, of the Department of Biology at York, said: “If this kind of drug proves to be successful in clinical trials, it would have the potential to bring long-lasting relief from PD symptoms and fewer side effects than existing levadopa therapy.”

Dr. Alex Wade, of the University’s Department of Psychology, added: “This technique forms a remarkable bridge between human clinical science and animal research. If it proves successful in the future, it could open the door to a new way of studying a whole range of neurological diseases.”

Have researched gene mutation

The researchers behind the discoveries have studied a specific mutation in a human gene. The mutation is the largest genetic risk factor for developing Parkinson’s disease, probably because it results in over-activity in a particular enzyme in the brain.

It is believed that this over-activity causes brain cells to die in both humans and fruit flies, and it is this cell death which causes the disease in humans. The researchers have now discovered that you can prevent precursors to this cell death in fruit flies by reducing the over-activity with medicine, and that brings hope that the same can be done in humans.

By hatching fruit flies with the mutation, the researchers have been able to study its specific effect in a complex living organism immediately from this organism’s birth. It has been previously demonstrated that the gene mutation will cause the brain cells of fruit flies to die by changing the communication processes in the brain. Researchers have now been able to measure these changes in the fruit fly’s eye long before cell death occurs.

Thus, for the first time ever, researchers have been able to measure the effects of the mutation long before cells have died, and therefore before damage have occurred to the brain. If these processes also occur in humans, the new research may allow for the possibility of detecting and treating Parkinson’s disease before brain cells die.

This would represent great progress compared to the situation today, where treatment typically only begins when the disease is relatively advanced and there has been a great loss of brain cells.

Preventive treatment

At the same time, the new discoveries prove that the gene mutation results in changes in the brain as a result of over-activity of a particular enzyme in the fruit fly’s brain cells. A process which researchers see as parallel to the processes that lead to the death of brain cells in people with Parkinson’s disease.

In the new studies, researchers have also been able to determine what happens if you reduce this over-activity by giving the flies a drug with a dampening effect on gene mutation. The result was that the cells and processes in the brain are normalized when the over-activity is reduced, which is expected to eliminate cell death.

The discovery is groundbreaking because it might pave the way for people with the specific gene mutation – and possibly Parkinson’s patients in general – to be diagnosed earlier, receive preventive treatment and thus never develop Parkinson’s disease. In other words, the same principle used today to for example, provide cholesterol-lowering medication to minimize the risk of future blood clots.

At best, new treatments based on this new research could be on the market within 10 years. Lundbeck currently has a number of research projects and collaborations relevant to Parkinson’s disease.

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