91精品黑料吃瓜

91精品黑料吃瓜 team shines light on underpinnings of rare disease impacting children

By David McFadden

Communications Advisor & Research Writer, University of Ottawa

Neurons
The rigorous study led by Canada Research Chair Dr. Arezu Jahani-Asl could have big implications for similar X-linked disorders that hobble the formation of new brain cells.

A 91精品黑料吃瓜 Faculty of Medicine team has completed an exciting new study that reveals the inner workings of gene mutations that result in an ultra-rare syndrome with fewer than 100 reported cases since its first description in the early 1960s.

The hard-won research discovery may accelerate the development of a treatment for  a neurodevelopmental disorder linked to the X chromosome that鈥檚 characterized by seizures, intellectual disability, and behavioural disturbances. Children born with this devastating disease typically also exhibit physical symptoms including distinctive facial features and growth defects such as tapered fingers.

, the rigorous study鈥檚 results could likely have broader impact, potentially brightening treatment prospects for other rare X-linked neurodevelopmental syndromes.  

Jahani Asl
Dr. Arezu Jahani-Asl, Canada Research Chair in Neurobiology of Disease.

鈥淭he study of rare diseases of neurodevelopmental disorders and cognitive impairments advances our understanding of underlying mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and lays the foundation for the design of novel therapeutics,鈥 says senior author Dr. Arezu Jahani-Asl, an associate professor in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and  at The Ottawa Hospital.

The project started by characterizing PHF6 gene regulation of the genome in the developing cortex of an embryonic mouse brain, according to , whose research program is centered on developing novel therapeutic strategies for devastating brain diseases. Employing computational approaches and multiomics, a biological analysis approach that provides nuanced data on how biological systems interact, they identified a panel of ephrin receptors as direct downstream targets.

First author Dilan Rasool, a visiting scholar at 91精品黑料吃瓜 who is  and a ,  says she used several different mouse models of the disease and established that they exhibited altered neural stem cells and progenitor populations, as well as deregulation of ephrin receptors, which are proteins involved in wide range of processes in developing human embryos.

Rasool
Dilan Rasool, a visiting scholar at 91精品黑料吃瓜 who is a member of Dr. Jahani-Asl鈥檚 lab.

The consequence of this phenomenon, according to Dr. Jahani-Asl, is that the 鈥淓ph-A鈥 family of receptors are a viable transcriptional target of the PHF6 gene and may 鈥渞epresent a therapeutically exploitable target鈥 for BFLS and other X-linked intellectual disability disorders (XLID).

鈥淭he goal is to translate these discoveries into practical applications that could benefit individuals affected by XLID and other cognitive disorders stemming from neural stem cell misregulation,鈥 Dr. Jahani-Asl says.

The project鈥檚 reviewers praised the innovative, methodical work. One reviewer wrote: 鈥The authors solve the molecular mechanisms of how Phf6 mutants cause neurogenic defects in BFLS. The discovery of Phf6-EphA regulatory pathway connects a rare disease to a conventional neurogenic molecule, which largely accelerates the development of BFLS treatment.鈥

The study was supported by funding from NSERC and CIHR. The team included international and national collaborators and 91精品黑料吃瓜 colleagues including Drs. Vahab Soleimani, Ruth Slack and David Picketts

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