Gene therapy has been found useful in plants and also in domestic animals.
But gene therapy in man raises many ethical issues. However if gene therapy can be used for treatment of diseases once thought to be incurable, it will be a boon for mankind. But, we should conduct many more trials before using it as a form of treatment.
Anupama
--- On Sat, 2/5/09, drswapniljaiswal <drswapniljaiswal@...> wrote:
From: drswapniljaiswal <drswapniljaiswal@...> Subject: [netrum] GENE THERAPY To: netrum@yahoogroups.com Date: Saturday, 2 May, 2009, 9:13 AM
Dear members,
In the early 1970s, scientists proposed "gene surgery" for treating inherited diseases caused by faulty genes. The idea was to take out the disease-causing gene and surgically implant a gene that functioned properly. Although sound in theory, scientists, then and now, lack the biological knowledge or technical expertise needed to perform such a precise surgery in the human body. However, in 1983, a group of scientists from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, proposed that gene therapy could one day be a viable approach for treating Lesch-Nyhan disease, a rare neurological disorder. The scientists conducted experiments in which an enzyme-producing gene (a specific type of protein) for correcting the disease
was injected into a group of cells for replication. The scientists theorized the cells could then be injected into people with Lesch-Nyhan disease, thus correcting the genetic defect that caused the disease.
As the science of genetics advanced throughout the 1980s, gene therapy gained an established foothold in the minds of medical scientists as a promising approach to treatments for specific diseases. One of the major reasons for the growth of gene therapy was scientists' increasing ability to identify the specific genetic malfunctions that caused inherited diseases. Interest grew as further studies of DNA and chromosomes showed that specific genetic abnormalities in one or more genes occurred in successive generations of certain family members who suffered from diseases like intestinal cancer, manic-depression, Alzheimer's disease, heart disease, diabetes, and many more. Although the genes may not be the only cause of the disease in all cases, they may make certain individuals more susceptible to developing the
disease because of environmental influences, like smoking, pollution, and stress. In fact, some scientists theorize that all diseases may have a genetic component.
On September 14, 1990, a four-year old girl suffering from adenosine deamianse (ADA) enzyme deficiency became the first person to undergo gene therapy in the United States. Because her body could not produce adenosine deamianse (ADA), she had a weakened immune system, making her extremely susceptible to severe, life-threatening infections. W. French Anderson and colleagues at the National Institutes of Health's Clinical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, took white blood cells (which are crucial to proper immune system functioning) from the girl, inserted ADA producing genes into them, and then transfused the cells back into the patient. Although the young girl continued to show an increased ability to produce ADA, debate arose as to whether the improvement resulted from the gene therapy or from an additional drug
treatment she received.
Nevertheless, a new era of gene therapy began as more and more scientists sought to conduct clinical trial research in this area.
Regards
Dr. Swapnil Jaiswal.
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