作者
Nikolai A. Naryshkin,Marla Weetall,Amal Dakka,Jana Narasimhan,Xin Zhao,Zhihua Feng,Karen Ling,Gary M. Karp,Hongyan Qi,Matthew G. Woll,Guangming Chen,Nanjing Zhang,Vijayalakshmi Gabbeta,Priya Vazirani,Anuradha Bhattacharyya,Bansri Furia,Nicole Risher,Josephine Sheedy,Ronald Kong,Jiyuan Ma,Anthony Turpoff,Chang-Sun Lee,Xiaoyan Zhang,Young‐Choon Moon,Panayiota Trifillis,Ellen Welch,Joseph M. Colacino,John Babiak,Neil G. Almstead,Stuart W. Peltz,Loren A. Eng,Karen Chen,Jesse L. Mull,Maureen S. Lynes,Lee L. Rubin,Paulo Fontoura,Luca Santarelli,Daniel Haehnke,Kathleen McCarthy,Roland Schmucki,Martin Ebeling,Manaswini Sivaramakrishnan,Chien‐Ping Ko,Sergey Paushkin,Hasane Ratni,Irene Gerlach,Anirvan Ghosh,Friedrich Metzger
摘要
Drugs that provide the splice of life Motor neurons relay signals from the nervous system to muscle fibers. In patients with spinal muscular atrophy, a protein required for the survival of these neurons is deficient or missing altogether, so the neurons gradually die and the patients' muscles waste away. The disease is currently untreatable. Naryshkin et al. discovered small-molecule drugs that cause cells to produce the missing protein by altering how a specific mRNA is put together, or “spliced” (see the Perspective by Vigevani and Valcárcel). When the researchers used the drugs to treat diseased mice, the mice showed marked improvement in muscle mass, motor function, and survival. Science , this issue p. 688 ; see also p. 624