PUBLISHED FOR FRIENDS OF CONQUER FRAGILE X FOUNDATION
Winter 2003 Newsletter

MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

I am delighted to write to you at the start of this New Year to summarize our achievements of 2002 and look ahead at all we will accomplish in 2003.

2002 was a major growth year for Conquer Fragile X Foundation. We added three new exciting projects, each with first rate investigators at top-notch laboratories. Gary Bassell and his team at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine are working to align and coordinate the fragile X research at his own lab and that of Bob and Jennifer Darnell at Rockefeller and Mark Bear at Brown University. Dr. Bassell’s team is in the running to become one of the new NIH-funded Fragile X Research Centers of Excellence in early 2003 and we wish them the best of luck. Dr. Yolanda de Diego is working in Malaga, Spain to try some antioxidant compounds as a treatment to reequilibrate the oxidative system on the FMR1 knockout mouse and to study the behavioral profile of these animals and their response to the treatments. She reports that the early results are very positive. And, Dr. Assam el-Osta, a recent addition to the CFXF Board of Scientific Advisors, is now the Senior Research Investigator at the new Baker Institute in Melbourne, Australia. Dr. el-Osta has brought all his enthusiasm and energy for fragile X research to his new position and we have gained a new and aggressive fragile X research site in Australia! Throughout 2003 we will work closely with all our investigators as we watch their projects develop.

We have added two new Scientific Advisors to our team. Dr. Karen Usdin, a Senior Investigator at the NIH has joined us, as has Dr. Pietro Chiurazzi of the Catholic University in Rome, Italy. We welcome them and look forward to putting their skills and experience to work for us. They join the ranks of our excellent Scientific Advisory Board that will guide our funding and research decisions in 2003.

The International Fragile X Conference in Chicago in July re-energized the entire fragile X research and family community. The National Fragile X Foundation and their Chicago affiliate did an exceptional job organizing what, by any standard, is a very large conference. They worked diligently to provide a forum for families, researchers and practitioners to share ideas, experiences and information. CFXF enjoyed great visibility at that conference; hundreds of people learned about us and what we do. In 2003 we will work to keep the positive momentum going and to become even more widely known in the research community.

We have been very busy throughout the past year working with the Coalition for Children’s Health, with the NIH and the new CDC Center for Birth Defects, Developmental Disabilities and Disability and Health. Each of these organizations provides a piece to the puzzle of public research funding and each plays an important role in keeping fragile X a medical research priority. Karen Fay, our Grant and Funding Manager will chair the Membership and Development Committee for the Coalition in 2003 and will continue to represent CFXF on the new CDC Center’s Partners Committee Workgroups. The National Fragile X Foundation and FRAXA are also represented within these important groups and together we have been very successful in seeing that fragile X remains a medical research priority.

As always, none of this would be possible without the generosity and support of our donors, to whom we are very grateful. Our Scientific Advisors, researchers, and friends are always mindful that your contributions to our research efforts make our continued work toward a cure a priority for all of us. I wish each of you a happy, healthy and peaceful New Year, and thank you once again for your continued support.

Harris Hollin
President

MARYLAND GROUP TOURS
DR. USDIN'S LAB

Karen Usdin, our newest Scientific Advisor, hosted the Maryland Fragile X Resource Group at her NIH facility in Bethesda, Maryland on September 9, 2002. Dr. Usdin presented a mini-seminar on fragile X syndrome, which included the latest information on the disorder, the focus of current scientific research, and handouts for participants. She and four lab assistants gave the group a tour of her research facility and briefed them on the latest technologies to test, analyze and determine the existence of fragile X and its various parameters. Dr. Usdin and her staff gave an outstanding presentation, answering dozens of questions and providing very personal attention to a curious group. In appreciation, MDFXRG President, Kristen Head, presented Karen with a lovely 2003 Thomas Kincade calendar. Since most of us do not have access to Dr. Usdin's Maryland labs, she has generously provided us the following explanation of her current fragile X research.

Studying the Causes and Consequences of the Unusual Mutation Responsible for Fragile X Syndrome

Karen Usdin
Laboratory of Molecular & Cellular Biology National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases National Institutes of Health

My research group at the NIH is studying the unusual mutation responsible for fragile X syndrome. We are also interested in the chain of events set in motion by this mutation that led to the loss of fragile X protein (FMRP), and thus to the symptoms of this disorder. We thereby hope to identify points in this process where intervention to ameliorate fragile X symptoms may someday be possible.

We are trying to understand these events at the molecular level. Our early work focused on the behavior of the fragile X repeats in vitro. We and others showed that one strand of the repeat forms a hairpin structure in which the DNA, as the name suggests, folds back on itself to form a structure that looks rather like a bobby pin. The DNA also forms a second structure that resembles a hairpin that has been folded in half. We showed that this folded hairpin has a potentially significant property: it blocks DNA synthesis very effectively. It is thought such blocks may lead to the fragile X mutation in a number of different ways. We are currently trying to develop a good mouse model to study this process, but have been hampered by the apparent ability of mice to prevent or correct such mutations. However, we are optimistic that one set of mice we have recently generated, which has a large number of repeats in its fmr1 gene, may be useful both for studying factors that affect the mutational process as well as the premature ovarian failure sometimes seen in female carriers of “premutation” alleles, and the tremor and ataxia seen in some male carriers. We have also generated genetically modified human cell lines that can be used to analyze the changes in gene expression occurring in these carriers. Our preliminary experiments have identified at least one pathway that may be important in causing the symptoms in these individuals.

We have also been studying how the full mutation affects the regulation of the FMR1 gene. We have identified 2 proteins that are critical for FMR1 gene function in unaffected individuals and “premutation” carriers. We showed that the ability of one of these proteins to activate the gene is blocked by DNA methylation, the very modification of the FMR1 gene that occurs in most fully affected individuals and is responsible for the loss of FMRP. This finding has repercussions for any attempts to reactivate the gene. We are now expanding these studies to try and develop a more complete picture of the consequences of the fragile X mutation that we hope may one day allow us to reduce or even reverse its effects.

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Harris Hollin, Chairman & Founder ¤ Karen Fay, President
PO Box 128Palm Beach, FL 33480
Telephone: 561-833-3457 Fax: 561-833-8791
Email: mail@cfxf.org

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