Rennebohm Gift Boosts UW Multiple Sclerosis Research
Article originally published on July 16, 1998
MADISON - A $600,000 gift from the Oscar Rennebohm Foundation will help
University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher Ian Duncan accelerate work on
a promising treatment for Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and other myelin disorders.
Duncan, a professor in the School of Veterinary Medicine, has been making
strides on a cell transplantation therapy that can repair nerve tissue damaged
by MS. The disease attacks a protective sheath on nerve cells called myelin,
and the resulting damage causes lesions on the brain and spinal cord and
reduces nerve function.
More than 300,000 Americans suffer from MS, and another 200 people are
diagnosed with the disease each week. Symptoms can range from mild to debilitating
and include vision problems, speech disturbances, loss of coordination and
paralysis. Scientists have not identified the underlying cause of the disease,
but are making progress on treatments.
"We are extremely grateful to the Rennebohm Foundation for this
funding, which really allows us to move up to the next level in our research,"
Duncan said. "My hope is that within the next 12 to 18 months, the
first phase of human clinical trials can begin."
Duncan's research to date has involved dogs with a genetic defect affecting
myelin that's similar to human diseases. Two years ago, Duncan successfully
transplanted glial cells, which produce myelin, into areas of the spinal
cord deficient in myelin in these animals and in rats with a similar disorder.
The procedure produced significant growth of myelin in the treated areas.
Myelin serves as a form of insulation for nerves, allowing impulses to
move freely from one part of the body to another.
This could be a landmark therapy in treating MS, Duncan said, since it
would repair damaged tissue rather than only treating symptoms. Beyond MS,
the treatment could be beneficial for an entire class of myelin-related
disorders, including Lorenzo's Disease (adrenoleukodystrophy) and Krabbe's
Disease, usually fatal diseases which strike children.
Duncan said the Rennebohm gift will help his team answer several important
questions before human clinical trials can begin. "We have human glial
cells now, but we have not proven that they will grow and survive in tissue
culture," he said. "We're trying to create safe cell lines which
could be preserved and used in future cell transplants."
Key issues remaining are finding the most reliable source for cells for
transplantation, and selecting the most appropriate patient population for
the clinical trials, which would be overseen by the National Institutes
of Health (NIH). The actual transplant procedure is relatively uncomplicated,
he said.
Duncan said the Rennebohm gift will allow him to add new postdoctoral
researchers to his 12-member research team, bringing more focus to the unsolved
issues. William Young, an emeritus UW-Madison professor and Rennebohm Foundation
board member, said Duncan operates one of only a few labs in the world doing
this kind of work on myelin repair. "If he's successful, this treatment
could provide real help for people with MS," Young said. "We're
delighted to support a program working to treat a disease that currently
has no cure."
The foundation was established in 1949 by Oscar Rennebohm, a successful
businessman and former Wisconsin governor who owned the once-largest chain
of drug stores in Madison. It supports a wide variety of community projects
and agencies and has been a major benefactor of the university, with total
UW-Madison gifts topping $15 million.
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