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Saturday, July 19, 2008 - 2:28 AM
Advances in gene therapy could tempt
some athletes to enhance their genetic makeup, leading some researchers
to work on detection methods just in case. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
In early
August — 8/8/08, to be precise — the curtain will rise on what many experts
believe could prove to be the first genetically modified Olympics.
For the unscrupulous or overdriven Olympic athlete, the
banned practice of “doping” by taking hormones or other drugs to enhance
athletic prowess may seem so last century. The next thing in doping is more
profound and more dangerous. It’s called gene doping: permanently
inserting strength- or endurance-boosting genes into DNA. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
“Once you put that gene in, it’s there for the rest of that
person’s life,” says Larry Bowers, a clinical chemist at the U.S. Anti-Doping
Agency in Colorado
Springs, Colo.
“You can’t go back and fish it out.”
Scientists developed the technology behind gene doping as a
promising way to treat genetic diseases such as sickle-cell anemia and the
“bubble boy” immune deficiency syndrome. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com This experimental medical technology —
called gene therapy — has begun to emerge from the pall of early failures and
fatalities in clinical trials. As gene therapy begins to enjoy some preliminary
successes, scientists at the World Anti-Doping Agency, which oversees drug
testing for the Olympics, have started to worry that dopers might now see abuse
of gene therapy in sport as a viable option, though the practice was banned by
WADA in 2003.
“Gene therapy has now broken out from what seemed to be too
little progress and has now shown real therapies for a couple diseases, and
more coming,” says Theodore Friedmann, a gene therapy expert at the University
of California, San Diego and chairman of WADA’s panel on gene doping.
While gene therapy research has begun making great strides,
the science of detecting illicit use of gene therapy in sport is only now
finding its legs. To confront the perceived inevitability of gene doping,
Friedmann and other scientists have started in recent years to explore the
problem of detecting whether an athlete has inserted a foreign gene — an extra
copy that may be indistinguishable from the natural genes — into his or her
DNA.
It’s proving to be a formidable challenge. Genetic makeup
varies from person to person, and world-class athletes are bound to have some
natural genetic endowments that other people lack. Somehow, gene-doping tests
must distinguish between natural genetic variation among individuals and genes
inserted artificially — and the distinction must stand up in court.
Scientists are fighting genetics with genetics, so to speak,
enlisting the latest technologies for gene sequencing or for profiling the
activity of proteins to find the telltale signs of gene doping. Some techniques
attempt the daunting search for the foreign gene itself, like looking for a
strand of hay in an enormous haystack.
But new research could also lead to an easier and more
foolproof approach: detecting the characteristic ways that an inserted gene
affects an athlete’s body as a whole.
Resurgence of gene therapy
In 1999, 18-year-old Jesse Gelsinger died during a gene
therapy trial for a rare liver disease. Investigators later attributed his
death to a violent immune reaction to the delivery virus rather than to the
therapeutic gene. His death was a major setback for the field. It also may have
scared away early would-be gene dopers.
In recent years, safety and efficacy of gene therapy have
shown signs of progress in numerous clinical trials for conditions ranging from
early-onset vision loss to erectile dysfunction. As scientists develop ways to
use safer, weaker viruses for delivery, and as gene therapies wind their way
through clinical trials, athletes and coaches might start to see gene doping as
even more viable than they already do.
In the courtroom during the 2006 trial of Thomas
Springstein, a German track coach accused of giving performance-enhancing drugs
to high-school–age female runners, prosecutors read aloud an e-mail Springstein
had written that would shock the sports world.
“The new Repoxygen is hard to get,” the e-mail read,
according to press reports. “Please give me new instructions soon so that I can
order the product before Christmas.”
Repoxygen isn’t merely another doping drug such as a hormone
or the latest designer steroid — it’s an experimental virus designed to deliver
a therapeutic gene and insert it into a person’s DNA.
British pharmaceutical company Oxford BioMedica developed
Repoxygen in 2002 as a treatment for severe anemia. The therapy “infects”
patients with a harmless virus carrying a modified gene that encodes
erythropoietin, a protein that boosts red blood cell production. This protein,
often called EPO, is itself a favorite among dopers seeking to increase their
oxygen capacity, and hence their endurance.
Viruses have the natural ability to inject genetic material
into their host’s DNA. The host’s cells can translate that gene into active
proteins as if the foreign gene were the cells’ own. So by delivering the gene
for EPO within a virus, Repoxygen could potentially increase the amounts of EPO
protein — and the change would be permanent. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
Athletes might also be tempted by perhaps the most
tantalizing gene therapy experiment of all: the “mighty mouse.” In 1998, H. Lee
Sweeney and his colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
injected mice with a virus carrying a gene that boosted production of
insulin-like growth factor 1, or IGF-1, a protein that regulates muscle growth.
As a result, the mice had 15 percent more muscle mass and were 14 percent
stronger than untreated mice — without ever having exercised. The treatment
also prevented the decline of muscle mass as the mice grew older.
Other genetic paths to increase muscle strength and volume
could include the gene for human growth hormone or segments of DNA that block a
protein called myostatin, which normally limits muscle growth.
Endurance might also be boosted by the gene encoding a
protein called peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta, or PPAR-delta.
Mice engineered to have extra copies of this gene hopped onto a treadmill and,
without ever having trained, ran about twice as far as unaltered mice. The
extra PPAR-delta improved the ability of the mice’s muscles to use fat
molecules for energy, and it shifted the animals’ ratio of muscle fiber types
from fast-twitch toward slow-twitch fibers — a change that would improve muscle
endurance in people as well. Ronald Evans and his colleagues at the Salk
Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif.,
published the research in 2004.
Since then, Evans says, he has been routinely approached by
curious coaches and athletes. “I’ve had athletes come to my lectures and go to
the microphone and say, ‘If I took this drug, would it work with EPO and growth
hormone?’ I mean, they would ask this publicly,” Evans says.
“Based on athletes I’ve talked with, I’d say that it’s a
reasonable possibility that gene doping will be used in this Olympics, and I
think there’s a very high probability that it will be used in the next
Olympics,” he says.
Elusive signs
Around the time that Evans was announcing his “marathon
mouse” results, WADA kicked off a funding program to focus scientific research
on strategies for detecting gene doping.
“A key part of our project is to try to define what we call
signatures of doping,” says Olivier Rabin, a biomedical engineer and director
of science for WADA. “We are looking at the impact of those kinds of genetic
manipulations at different levels.”
The first and most obvious approach is simply to look for
the inserted gene among the roughly 6 billion “letters” of genetic code in both
sets of a person’s chromosomes.
For clinical gene therapy trials, finding the inserted gene
is fairly easy. Scientists know the exact sequence of the gene they inserted,
and often they know where on the person’s chromosomes the gene should have
ended up. Standard DNA sequencing techniques can reveal the genetic code for
that region on the chromosomes, and the unique sequence of the inserted gene
will be in plain view. With gene doping, the situation is much trickier.
“In sport, you don’t know where that gene will be put, what
virus was used or even what particular variety of gene was used,” Friedmann
says. “You don’t have the advantage of knowing where to look and for what, so
the argument is to look everywhere.”
Another difficulty is that copies of the foreign gene
wouldn’t be in all of a person’s cells. The gene-carrying viruses selectively
target certain tissues such as muscle or liver (the liver helps to regulate
muscle metabolism). Some blood cells might also take in the viruses’ genetic
payloads, but it’s questionable whether a standard blood sample from an athlete
would contain the gene. Instead, anti-doping officials would have to sample
muscle tissue directly using punch biopsies, a procedure that is mildly
painful.
“No one’s expecting that an athlete will agree to a muscle
biopsy,” Friedmann says. “That’s a nonstarter.”
Still, direct detection of inserted genes could work in some
cases. Evans points out that an artificially inserted gene for PPAR-delta would
be much smaller than the natural gene. That’s because the natural gene is far
too big to hitch a ride on the carrier virus. Fitting the gene onto a virus
means only a trimmed down version of the gene can be used. This distinctive
genetic pattern would only exist in a person who had undergone gene doping.
In other cases, genes would end up in tissues where they’re
not normally active, making detection more straightforward. For example, the
liver and kidneys normally produce the protein EPO, which makes red blood
cells, but gene doping could deliver the EPO-coding gene directly to muscle
tissues. The trick, then, is to find a noninvasive way to detect where EPO
production is occurring inside the body. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
One solution is to use medical imaging techniques such as
PET scans. In research funded by WADA, Jordi Segura and his colleagues at the
Municipal Institute for Medical Research in Barcelona, Spain,
attached slightly radioactive “flags” to molecules made during EPO production.
A standard PET scan can spot this radioactivity, revealing where EPO was being
made in the bodies of mice injected with gene-doping viruses, the team reported
in the October 2007 Therapeutic Drug Monitoring. The researchers showed
that production of EPO in muscle tissue was a telltale sign of gene doping.
With radioactivity that is relatively mild, the labels are
routinely used in medical imaging to diagnose diseases and don’t pose a
significant hazard. But Friedmann notes that asking athletes to undergo such a
procedure could be controversial.
Detection by proxy
Another approach is to look for signs of the viral
“infection,” rather than for the gene itself. Even a weakened virus could
trigger a mild, and specific, immune reaction that might show up in a blood
test.
Perhaps the greatest challenge facing this method is that
viruses aren’t the only way to deliver a gene into a doper’s body. “The reality
is that you can just inject naked DNA directly into tissues” with a syringe,
Evans says. “Direct injection could be more local and harder to detect.”
This relatively crude way to insert a gene won’t spread the
gene as widely through a person’s body as viruses injected into the bloodstream
would. But many cells near the site of injection could take in the gene,
perhaps enough to improve athletic performance.
Microscopic, synthetic spheres of fat molecules called
liposomes can also shuttle doping genes into the body.
To prevent dopers from evading detection by simply changing
delivery vehicles, scientists are also exploring a third approach to developing
tests: proteomics, the detailed study of all the proteins in the human body.
Regardless of the vehicle used, adding a new gene to the
body’s tightly woven web of interacting genes and proteins will cause ripples
of change to spread throughout that web. “There will be a body-wide response no
matter what gene you use or where in the body you put it,” Friedmann says, “and
those changes can be used as a signature of doping.”
Painful biopsies wouldn’t be required. Because the cascade
of changes in protein activity would be widespread, anti-doping officials could
test using blood, urine, hair or even sweat. Tools developed for the burgeoning
fields of genomics and proteomics allow scientists to see the activity levels
of thousands of genes or proteins simultaneously.
In preliminary unpublished experiments, Friedmann and his
colleagues injected a type of muscle cell with the gene for IGF-1. Activity of
hundreds of genes changed as a result, including a boost in the activity of
genes that control production of cholesterol, steroids and fatty acids. All of
these changes might be detectable with simple blood tests.
WADA is funding half a dozen or so ongoing studies on this
proteome-based detection strategy, but research in this area is still at an
early stage. “There’s good reason to think that’s likely to work, and a number
of labs are having some nice results,” Friedmann says. http://louis2j2sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
As for whether any tests for gene doping will be ready in
time for the Beijing Olympics, anti-doping authorities aren’t giving away many
hints that might help dopers evade detection. “We never say when our tests are
going to be in place,” WADA’s Rabin says.
Even if detection methods do lag behind the games, dopers
may want to think twice before assuming they’re in the clear, Friedmann notes.
“With stored [blood and urine] samples, one always has the option of going back
some months or years later and checking again with the newest tests.”
Just in case the dangers of tampering with a person’s
genetic makeup weren’t enough of a disincentive.
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