Projekte Ergebnisse für «rare disease»

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No results for BLEEDnFIRE Therapeutics - to prevent both bleeding and inflammation
GRS-093/24 CHF 150'000 Raja Prince-Eladnani 05.2025 - 05.2026
Nerai Bio - Unlocking the full potential of gene editing
GRS-035/24 CHF 150'000 Kim Fabiano Marquart 09.2024 - 02.2026
Towards Small Molecule Intervention in Cockayne Syndrome – Rare Diseases 2014
GRS-057/14 CHF 480'000 Nicolas Thomä 07.2015 - 01.2020
Novel treatment options for Aicardi-Goutières Syndrome (AGS) – Rare Diseases 2014
GRS-059/14 CHF 470'000 Andrea Ablasser 04.2015 - 06.2019
Nrf2 and Netherton Syndrome – Rare Diseases 2013
GRS-052/13 CHF 380'000 Matthias Schäfer 06.2014 - 03.2019
Next Generation Sequencing and Functional Platform – Rare Diseases 2014
GRS-061/14 CHF 250'000 Fabio Candotti 05.2015 - 01.2019
Treating Myotonic Dystrophy – Rare Diseases 2014
GRS-060/14 CHF 420'000 Vincent Dion 02.2015 - 10.2018
Stoffwechsel des Immunsystems – Schlüssel für neue Therapieansätze bei immunologischer Abwehrschwäche? – Rare Diseases 2014
GRS-058/14 CHF 400'000 Christoph Hess 04.2015 - 07.2018
Neurodegeneration in Rasmussen Encephalitis – Rare Diseases 2013
GRS-049/13 CHF 490'000 Doron Merkler 04.2014 - 05.2018
Treatment for Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus – Rare Diseases 2013
GRS-050/13 CHF 450'000 Jean Pieters 01.2014 - 03.2018
Therapies for Dysferlinopathies - Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-042/11 CHF 480'000 Michael Sinnreich 04.2012 - 03.2018
New Drug Targets to Treat Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD) – Rare Diseases 2013
GRS-051/13 CHF 480'000 Daniel Constam 03.2014 - 11.2017
Treating Dominant Optic Athrophy – Rare Diseases 2013
GRS-048/13 CHF 300'000 Albert Neutzner 07.2014 - 11.2017
Chronic Mucocutaneous Candidiasis - Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-044/11 CHF 500'000 Salomé Leibundgut-Landmann 07.2012 - 05.2017
Schweizer Register für Seltene Krankheiten
GRS-030/14 CHF 50'000 Matthias Baumgartner 11.2014 - 03.2017
Molecular Basis of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Persistence during Chronic Infections of Cystic Fibrosis Airways – Rare Diseases 2012
GRS-035/12 CHF 370'000 Urs Jenal 02.2013 - 12.2016
Optogenic Vision Restoration – Rare Diseases 2012
GRS-039/12 CHF 500'000 Botond Roska 12.2012 - 08.2016
Uromodulin-Associated Kidney Diseases – Rare Diseases 2012
GRS-038/12 CHF 490'000 Olivier Devuyst 03.2013 - 08.2016
Diseases of Imprinting – Rare Diseases 2012
GRS-036/12 CHF 400'000 Didier Trono 01.2013 - 06.2016
Inducing Immunological Tolerance to Galsulfase – Rare Diseases 2012
GRS-037/12 CHF 300'000 Jeffrey A. Hubbell 04.2013 - 05.2016
Vaccination for the Prevention and Cure of Inflammatory Bowel Disease – Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-043/11 CHF 190'000 Anne Müller 02.2012 - 11.2015
Lymphedema-Distichiasis – Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-045/11 CHF 500'000 Tatiana Petrova 03.2012 - 09.2015
Prodrug Platform for Rare Colonic Diseases - Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-041/11 CHF 300'000 Jean-Christophe Leroux 05.2012 - 07.2015
Novel Mechanisms Causing Lafora Disease – Rare Diseases 2010
GRS-049/10 CHF 250'000 Oliver Kötting 04.2011 - 04.2015
Role of Macroautophagy in CGD and Correction of the Defect – Rare Diseases 2010
GRS-046/10 CHF 390'000 Janine Reichenbach 07.2011 - 04.2015
Identification of the Genomic Cause of Rare Autosomal Recessive Disorders Using Consanguinity – Rare Diseases 2010
GRS-047/10 CHF 500'000 Stylianos Antonarakis 01.2011 - 02.2015
Rescue of Dysfunctional RNA Processing in Spinal Muscular Atrophy – Rare Diseases 2010
GRS-048/10 CHF 400'000 Christoph Handschin 07.2011 - 11.2014
Towards a better mechanistic understandig of Friedreich’s Ataxia – Rare Diseases 2010
GRS-045/10 CHF 498'000 Marc Bühler 02.2011 - 05.2014
Gene hunting for recessive hereditary peripheral neuropathies by recent and highly-parallel technologies – Rare Diseases 2009
GRS-046/09 CHF 440'000 Carlo Rivolta 07.2010 - 03.2014
Identification of new factors implicated in genetic gonadal disorders – Rare Diseases 2009
GRS-048/09 CHF 450'000 Serge Nef 04.2010 - 12.2013
Seltene Nervenkrankheit – Rare Diseases 2009
GRS-047/09 CHF 340'000 Thorsten Hornemann 03.2010 - 09.2013
Towards preventing nodule formation in Hyaline Fibromatosis patients – Rare Diseases 2009
GRS-044/09 CHF 450'000 Gisou van der Goot 04.2010 - 09.2013
Role of snoRNAs in the Development of Prader Willi Syndrome – Rare Diseases 2011
GRS-046/11 CHF 110'000 Shivendra Kishore 02.2012 - 01.2013
Genetic screening for disease-causing mutations in familial polycythemia using next generation DNA sequencing – Rare Diseases 2009
GRS-045/09 CHF 300'000 Radek Skoda 04.2010 - 12.2012
CheckOrphan - rare, orphan and neglected diseases
GRS-027/08 CHF 365'000 Robert Derham 01.2009 - 08.2010
Kommunikation Programm «Rare Diseases»
GRS-063/08 CHF 85'000 Thomas Pfluger 01.2009 - 12.2009

Suchergebnisse für «rare disease»

Funding strategy

... Baltic Net», «BREF» and «Rare Diseases – New Approaches» and ac... ... ic Net», «BREF» and «Rare Diseases – New Approaches» and accordi...

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Towards a better mechanistic understandig of Friedreich’s Ataxia – Rare Diseases 2010

Editorial

Für den Inhalt der Angaben zeichnet die Projektleitung verantwortlich.

Cooperation

This project is one of the five winners of the call 2010 «Rare Diseases - New Approaches». Project partners: Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research (FMI); Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation (GNF); Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research (NIBR); Uppsala University.

Project data

  • Project no: GRS-045/10 
  • Amount of funding: CHF 498'000 
  • Approved: 27.10.2010 
  • Duration: 02.2011 - 05.2014 
  • Area of activity:  Rare Diseases, 2009 - 2014

Project management

Project description

Friedreich's Ataxia is caused by a deficiency of the protein frataxin. Frataxin is essential for iron metabolism in mitochondria - the cellular components responsible for energy production. Accordingly, mitochondria are especially important in cells with substantial energy requirements, such as nerve cells or heart muscle cells. It is therefore not surprising that these cells are particularly affected in Friedreich's Ataxia: patients with this condition experience degeneration of the large sensory neurons and spinocerebellar tracts, but also cardiomyopathy.

In patients with Friedreich's Ataxia, a nucleotide sequence in the gene coding for frataxin is repeated up to 1000 times, compared with only about 30 times in healthy individuals. Although we know that this repeated sequence causes frataxin gene silencing, the precise mechanism remains enigmatic and there is currently no treatment available for Friedreich's Ataxia patients. Because the genetic basis for this disease is gene silencing, gene activation could be of therapeutic benefit. Therefore it is important to fully understand the mechanisms by which the frataxin gene is silenced in Friedreich’s Ataxia patients.

Our goal is to apply innovative technologies to gain insights into the pathogenic mechanisms of Friedreich's Ataxia and to search for novel therapeutics. Cardiomyocytes and neurons are the cell types most affected in Friedreich's Ataxia, yet mechanistic studies on frataxin silencing have been mainly performed by using peripheral blood lymphocytes obtained from patients. Therefore, we propose to reprogram patient-derived somatic cells into pluripotent cells (iPS), which will subsequently be differentiated into the relevant cell types. This will allow us to study Friedreich's Ataxia in the appropriate cell types and has great potential to yield novel mechanistic insights into the disease. Furthermore, we will generate a patient-cell-based system for drug discovery. Through high-throughput screens we hope to reveal novel drug targets or promising candidate compounds, which could be further developed into therapeutics to treat Friedreich's Ataxia patients.

Although Friedreich's Ataxia affects only about 4 in 100,000 people, at least 18 other human diseases are also known to be caused by repeated sequences (i.g. Huntington’s Disease, Spinocerebellar Ataxia, Myotonic Dystrophy). Therefore, the development of a treatment for Friedreich's Ataxia would not only help to cure a previously incurable disease, but might also be useful for other conditions with a similar pathogenic mechanism.

What is special about the project?

Thanks to the support of Gebert Rüf Stiftung, we could take advantage of the recent advances in iPS cell generation and set out to study the mechanism of frataxin silencing in the disease-relevant cell types. The GRS support also allowed us to develop new cell-based drug discovery tools, which have a great potential to reveal novel drug targets or promising candidate compounds that could be further developed into therapeutics.

Status/Results

Zinc-finger nucleases and donor constructs were designed and validated. These genome editing tools enable FRDA researchers to knock in any given sequence into the frataxin locus in any given cell type, facilitating the dissection of molecular pathways involved in FRDA.

A reporter cell line that allows an accurate and effortless assessment of endogenous frataxin gene regulation and is compatible with high throughput biology was established. The cell line is easy to transfect and can be expanded to a very large scale at a relatively low cost. Thus, the system is compatible with the technical and financial constraints of most academic and industrial screening platforms.

Novel potential drug targets were discovered in a high throughput genomics screen.

That screening for general regulators of frataxin transcription, irrespective of GAA repeat length, is an appropriate strategy in the quest for novel therapeutics to treat FRDA was demonstrated.

FRDA and control fibroblasts were successfully reprogrammed towards iPS cells.

Patient-derived iPS cells were differentiated into neurons and cardiomyocytes, the cell types most affected in FRDA.

Publications

Rodrigo Villaseñor, Loren Miraglia, Angelica Romero, Buu Tu, Tanel Punga, Philip Knuckles, Stephan Duss, Tony Orth, and Marc Bühler. Genome-engineering tools to establish accurate reporter cell lines that enable identification of therapeutic strategies to treat Friedreich’s Ataxia.
(Manuscript in revision);
Punga T, Bühler M (2010). Long intronic GAA repeats causing Friedreich ataxia impede transcription elongation. EMBO Mol Med 4: 120-129.

Links

Persons involved in the project

Prof. Marc Bühler, project leader marc.notexisting@nodomain.combuehler@fmi.notexisting@nodomain.comch
Dr. Tanel Punga, Institute of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology (IMBIM), Uppsala University, Sweden tanel.notexisting@nodomain.compunga@imbim.notexisting@nodomain.comuu.notexisting@nodomain.comse)
Dr. Anthony Orth, Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, San Diego, USA aorth@gnf.notexisting@nodomain.comorg
Mr. Lauren Miraglia, Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, San Diego, USA
Dr. Arnaud Lacoste, Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research, Cambridge MA, USA
Dr. Philip Knuckles, Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland
Mr. Rodrigo Villasenor, Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Basel, Switzerland rodrigo.notexisting@nodomain.comvillasenor@fmi.notexisting@nodomain.comch

Last update to this project presentation  16.07.2018