Free Newsletter
Mass spectrometry helps ID two MS drugs
There's a new target for drug developers focused on multiple sclerosis--and a pair of approved drugs that may already work against the disease. Using mass spectrometry, a team of researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine were able to inventory more than 2,500 proteins in the brain tissue samples taken from six people who had suffered from multiple sclerosis. They were able to narrow the list to five proteins that played a role in blood coagulation--a new pathway in the progression of the disease--that were all present in a single type of brain lesion called chronic active plaque.
To put their theory to the test, scientists used drugs that targeted two of the proteins--Hirulog and Xigris--in an experiment with mice. Paralyzed by an MS-like disease, the mice were able to walk after treatment. One of the big challenges of the disease, said Patricia O'Looney, vice president of biomedical research at the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, is that it takes different routes courses in different patients, spurring variable symptoms.
- read the report in The Washington Post
Related Articles:
Lilly sees pipeline hope in MS drug. Report
Antibody stimulates natural repair of MS damage. Report
Natural protein used to combat multiple sclerosis. Report
Comments
Post new comment
Paid Research Reports
- The Specialty Pharma Market Outlook: Key players, new company growth models and emerging opportunities
- Investigating Clinical Trial Costs: Comparative analysis of trial cost components in key geographies
- Clinical Trial Recruitment Strategies: Optimizing patient recruitment and retention in late stage clinical trials
- Pipeline Insight: Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines - Prospect of first approval set to reinvigorate interest from major companies
- Stakeholder Opinions: Vaccines in Emerging Markets (Asia) - Opportunities in China, India, South Korea and Taiwan
- Big Pharma Performance Before, During and Beyond the Global Recession





SHARE
WITH: