Takeda Licenses School of Medicine Technology for Rare Neurological Disorders
Leslie Capo, Director of Information Services
LSU Health New Orleans today announced that Takeda has exercised its option to receive
an exclusive license to certain early-stage technology designed to slow the progression
of DNA repeat expansion disorders.
In DNA repeat expansion disorders, a segment of repeated DNA expands within a gene to cause disease. The repeated DNA sequence itself continues to grow over time like a tumor.
Ed Grabczyk, PhD, Professor of Genetics at LSU Health New Orleans School of Medicine, discovered a potential way to slow or stop this continued growth by targeting a DNA mismatch repair protein believed to be responsible for DNA repeat expansion.
“Imagine that you have a ticking time bomb within your body that will go off in the future and destroy you,” explains Dr. Grabczyk. “That is essentially the situation faced by people who inherit a gene carrying a DNA repeat expansion. Our approach targets a central mechanism that is shared by all repeat expansion diseases.”
Huntington’s Disease is the most recognized repeat expansion disorder, but there are more than 40 other neurological disorders caused by a similar mechanism. While each of the individual repeat expansion diseases is somewhat rare, in total, the people impacted by the currently known repeat expansion diseases number over 100,000 in the United States alone.
“In 2018, the Harrington Discovery Institute affiliated with University Hospitals Health System in Ohio awarded Dr. Grabczyk a Harrington Rare Disease Scholar Award,” notes Patrick Reed, RTTP, Assistant Vice Chancellor, Innovation & Partnerships at LSU Health New Orleans. “This prestigious award provided more than additional research dollars; it granted him access to industry experts, a key resource to move development forward.”
“The success of Dr. Grabczyk’s program is a testament to the extraordinary impact that can be achieved through close collaboration between committed partners like Takeda and LSU Health New Orleans,” said Jonathan S. Stamler, MD, President, Harrington Discovery Institute, Robert S. and Sylvia K. Reitman Family Foundation Distinguished Professor of Cardiovascular Innovation and Professor of Medicine and of Biochemistry at University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve University. “We are pleased to have had the opportunity to support Dr. Grabczyk’s work.”