Showing posts with label huntingtin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label huntingtin. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2024

Aiming for multiple targets for Huntington’s disease therapies: a hopeful report from the Yang lab at UCLA

 

This article is in commemoration of Huntington’s Disease Awareness Month (May).

 

One of the most impactful university labs focusing on Huntington’s disease, the X. William Yang Research Group at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) employs a multi-pronged approach to investigating potential therapies for this deadly brain disorder.

 

Started in 2002 by X. William Yang, M.D., Ph.D., the lab has produced several key findings on HD, mainly through the study of genetically modified (i.e., transgenic) mice, engineered to carry the HD mutation and exhibit some of the disease-like phenotypes (characteristics).

 

Dr. Yang was inspired to focus on Huntington's disease because of his interaction with patients in Venezuela – the world’s largest clusters of HD families – and the HD scientists working there. In 2000 and 2002 he was invited to observe these families and assist with studies by Nancy Wexler, Ph.D., the president of the HD-centered Hereditary Disease Foundation (HDF) and leader of the landmark effort to identify the HD gene in 1993.

 

Dr. Yang's Venezuela experience cemented his resolve to study HD in his own lab. Indeed, the first research grant ever received by Dr. Yang was from HDF. Today he serves as its scientific advisory board’s vice chair.

 

Dr. Yang’s team has also collaborated with CHDI Foundation, Inc., the largest private funder of HD therapeutic research. Pharmaceutical firms such as Roche (the world’s largest) and Ionis Pharmaceuticals, Inc., the developer of the Roche drug now in its second HD clinical trial, have consulted Dr. Yang for his expertise.

 

Dr. Yang has emerged as a leading academic voice in HD science. Listed as the first author, in February he and two other important prominent HD researchers – Leslie Thompson, PhD., of UC Irvine and Myriam Heiman, Ph.D., of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – published a major co-edited book. Huntington’s Disease: Pathogenic Mechanisms and Implications for Therapeutics presents the latest work on the disease’s medical impact, genetics, the huntingtin protein, new tools and models for research, and an overview of therapeutic approaches and clinical trial programs.

 

 

The back and front covers of Huntington’s Disease: Pathogenic Mechanisms and Implications for Therapeutics (image courtesy of Dr. Yang) (Click on an image to enlarge it.)

 

‘The stars are aligned’ for developing HD treatments

 

Although the use of human data in HD research has increased dramatically, crucial research in mice has become more relevant to potential therapies because of new biotechnologies and the availability of so-called “big data” made possible by powerful computing systems.

 

“This is completely unprecedented in terms of the kind of study we can do,” Dr. Yang told me in a 40-minute interview on January 29, noting the advantages of a “21st century toolbox.” “Mouse models in this context are extremely useful.”

 

We met in Dr. Yang’s office in his lab, which is located in UCLA’s Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience and Genetics Research Center. I was invited to Los Angeles to offer my perspective as an HD gene carrier on the first day of a two-day HDF scientific workshop, co-chaired by Dr. Yang.

 

“I know it's probably an oxymoron to say that it's time to be hopeful, because we’ve been to a hopeful stage many times before,” Dr. Yang said, acknowledging the negative results of some recent clinical trials. He added that “the stars seem to be aligned” for developing HD treatments.

 

 

Dr. Yang (left) with project scientist Chris Park, Ph.D. At the far left is a confocal microscope, which uses laser light to obtain high-resolution images of thick tissues. Behind the men is a light sheet microscope, also used for obtaining high-quality images of tissues (photo by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin).

 

Focusing on the brain

 

Dr. Yang grew up in Tianjin, China, a port city located 80 miles from the capital, Beijing. In 1985, Dr. Yang was one of five students selected by the Chinese government to participate in the Rickover Science Institute, founded by Admiral Hyman G. Rickover to foster high-school science education for both domestic and international students. Rickover developed the first nuclear-powered engines and first atomic-powered submarine.

 

“I did a whole summer of research at the NIH [National Institutes of Health], working on signaling pathways in rat brains,” Dr. Yang wrote in a follow-up e-mail to our interview. “The research experience got me really interested in studying the mammalian brain.”

 

The Rickover program is now called the Research Science Institute (RSI). Among other prestigious alumni are Harvard University’s Steve McCarroll, Ph.D., a leading molecular geneticist who also works on HD; and MIT/Broad Institute's Feng Zhang, Ph.D., a CRISPR research pioneer.

 

After RSI, Dr. Yang briefly studied at Peking University, one of China's top universities, before transferring to Yale University, where in 1991 he completed the highly demanding joint B.S./M.S. program in molecular biophysics and biochemistry.

 

Over lunch Dr. Yang and I reminisced about our years at Yale. I was privileged to graduate from Yale in 1982. I told Dr. Yang that I had seen Admiral Rickover give a public lecture at the university – a poignant moment for me as a history major because of his military and scientific prominence. I told Dr. Yang of my interest in tracking the contributions of Yale and its graduates like him to HD science and medicine (click here, here, and here to read more.)

 

Dr. Yang completed the joint M.D./Ph.D. program at The Rockefeller University (Ph.D., 1998) and Weill Medical College of Cornell University (M.D., 2000) in New York City. In 2002, he finished postdoctoral research in the Rockefeller lab of Nathanael Heintz, Ph.D., which focuses on HD and other neurological and psychiatric disorders.

 


Gene Veritas (left) (aka Kenneth P. Serbin) with Dr. William Yang in his UCLA office. In the background: a mouse medium spiny neuron. In humans this neuron is one of the cells most affected by Huntington’s disease (photo by Nan Wang, Ph.D., of the Yang Research Group).

 

A ‘trustworthy and versatile’ invention

 

Dr. Yang and his lab have made key contributions to HD science, including understanding the causes and potential pathways to therapies. The team also studies Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and other neurodegenerative disorders.

 

As a Ph.D. student, Dr. Yang co-invented with Dr. Heintz and Peter Model, Ph.D., the first method to engineer Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) to generate transgenic mice. BACs have the advantage of holding long strands of DNA with key regulatory elements that confer accurate gene expression in transgenic animals.

 

In an analysis of this research, which Drs. Yang, Model, and Heintz published in 1997, one leading biologist described their technique as “trustworthy and versatile” for cloning genes and the key task of learning the specific function of particular genes.

 

Indeed, scientists have used this method to generate a variety of transgenic animals, from zebrafish to mammals (click here to read more).

 

The key BACHD mouse

 

In 2008, Dr. Yang and other researchers published the results of a project creating the first BAC transgenic mouse model of HD, the BACHD mouse, their term for this mouse specifically engineered to study HD.

 

As Dr. Yang explained in our interview, the team inserted a long strand of a mutant (irregularly expanded) human huntingtin gene into the mice. Those genetic characteristics do not normally exist in mice. As they hoped, the mice developed dysfunction, displaying impaired movements, shrinkage to the same brain regions affected in HD, and damage to the synapses (the connections between brain cells).

 

“We developed different versions of these mouse models to allow us to ask, for example, which cell types in the brain with mutant huntingtin are important,” Dr. Yang said.

 

The team demonstrated the presence of mutant huntingtin in two key areas of the brain: medium spiny neurons in the striatum and pyramidal neurons (brain cells) in the cortex. (See the photo above with Dr. Yang, me, and an image of a medium spiny neuron. Also see the photo in the next section.)

 

In mice, humans, and other mammals, the cortex handles important processes such as cognition, memory, motor control, and sensory processing. The striatum – an area deep in the brain and greatly affected in HD – controls motor (movement), motor and reward learning, and executive function. In humans, this region is also known as the caudate and putamen. The Yang lab also examines communication between these regions.

 


Dr. Yang (left) and Nan Wang, Ph.D., a project scientist focusing on Huntington’s, in the lab (photo by Gene Veritas)

 

Using mice and genetics to understand HD

 

In detecting the impact of mutant huntingtin in those areas, that initial BACHD research revealed disease phenotypes in both striatum and cortex, Dr. Yang recalled. “That study turned out to be really important because, for the longest time, people thought the striatum, the medium spiny neuron, was really the primary site of action.”

 

Removing the mutant huntingtin from the cortex led to improvement in the mice’s behavior and even partially helped the striatum, Dr. Yang explained. Likewise, deleting mutant huntingtin from the striatum brought some improvement.

 

“But most importantly, if you reduce mutant huntingtin in both cortex and striatum, the BACHD model looks really, really good, almost as good as a normal mouse,” he added.

 

The BACHD work, he recalled, helped to convince the field that  the cortex is one of the key brain regions that should be targeted in HD clinical trials. The Roche/Ionis ASO lowers the level of huntingtin protein more in the cortex than in the caudate/putamen, according to preclinical studies in non-human primates.

 

In sum, Dr. Yang said, the studies of BACHD mice represent a “proof of concept that we can use this kind of a sophisticated – genetically as accurate as we could get – type of mouse model to inform about disease pathogenesis” – how HD develops, progresses, and, significantly, might be treated.

 


A mouse medium spiny neuron (image courtesy of Dr. Yang)

 

From disease switch to vulnerable neurons

 

The Yang Research Group has achieved other key findings, some in collaboration with other labs.

 

The Yang lab teamed with researchers at UC Irvine, UC San Francisco, the University of Pittsburgh, and the University of Tennessee to study the chemical modification of the huntingtin protein itself. This research focused on so-called “chemical tags” that naturally attach to the very beginning of the huntingtin protein, a small region acts like a disease switch.

 

In one experiment, this research used a BACHD-like mouse to mimic the tagging. That resulted in mice that had “very little disease despite having the HD mutation,” Dr. Yang explained. The results were published in 2009.

 

In 2015, the Yang Research Group published a separate study showing the genetic switch is necessary to prevent severe disease including neuronal loss and movement deficits, phenotypes reminiscent of those found in HD. These studies showed that the huntingtin protein itself and its chemical tags could be a source of new targets to develop therapies, Dr. Yang said.

 

From watching mice in ‘log rolling contests’ to unbiased genetic analysis

 

In 2013, the Federal Government announced the launch of the BRAIN initiative to enhance understanding of the human brain. The Yang lab was one of the first 59 in the country to receive support in the initial round of BRAIN funding. It now has its third grant. It receives support from other government agencies, as well as the HDF and CHDI. The lab’s achievements include developing a new, genetic way to label the complete, intricate shape of single brain cells, which allows the study of their function and dysfunction in diseases such as HD.

 

With big data and "the 21st century toolbox," the field of HD research has advanced from more traditional ways of observing diseased mice to more nuanced molecular, cellular and systems biology analyses, Dr. Yang explained.

 

In earlier research, by primarily relying on the behavior and pathology of individual mice, the work resulted in “relatively few readouts” of data, Dr. Yang observed. With that methodology, scientists had mice doing activities such as “spontaneously move” in an open area or on a rotarod, “like the ESPN log rolling contest,” he said. Scientists also routinely measured loss of brain matter.

 

Now, scientists can do a “big-scale, unbiased molecular studies” by examining tens thousands of datapoints, including analysis of DNA, RNA and proteins, Dr. Yang added.

 

Clues from gene expression about neuronal vulnerability

 

Collaborating with CHDI, the Yang lab’s work in this area has involved study of HD’s impact in different areas of the brain, moving beyond the standard understanding that most damage comes in the striatum. The lab has done this research using different types of engineered HD mouse models carrying different lengths of CAG repeats and measured the levels of tens of thousands of RNA transcripts ("RNA-seq," that is, RNA sequencing) in the mouse brains and peripheral tissues.

 

Published in 2016, the results noted that despite the presence of the mutant HD gene throughout the body, the disruption in gene expression in these HD mice is highly selective to the striatum, the most affected brain region in HD. The severity of the disruption is correlated with the length of CAG repeats in these mice. Moreover, the molecular defects in the striatum appear in young adulthood, worsening with age.

 

“There's about 100 or so genes that have essential function selective to the striatal neurons that are most affected in Huntington’s disease,” Dr. Yang said. “And somehow the mutant huntingtin knows to go there and make them the sickest, which we thought was a remarkable find – a sense that there's some fundamental mechanism connecting this CAG expansion to selective neuronal vulnerability.”

 

‘Perturbing’ the mice to understand human modifier genes

 

Taking advantage of the gene signatures from RNA-seq studies, especially those selectively disrupted in the striatum, the Yang lab embarked on a study using such gene signatures to sensitively detect "modifiers" of the disease. To achieve this, they used these genes to genetically “perturb” the mice, Dr. Yang explained.

 

“We basically genetically perturb the huntingtin mouse and say, ‘which gene, if we perturb them just right, can make the disease worse – that's one thing that's interesting – but more importantly make them better. And if better, how much better.’”

 

Continuing this line of work, the lab has continued testing the impact of other genes. These experiments include study of some of the human HD modifier genes – about ten – previously identified by the Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) from over 9,000 HD-affected individuals and their relatives. The modifiers found by the Genetic Modifiers of Huntington's Disease Consortium can delay or hasten HD onset.

 

In addition, the Yang lab tested over 100 other candidate modifier genes identified in the prior systems biology work.

 

The scientists have tested large number of genetic mutants in HD mice to determine whether this makes the disease better or worse, Dr. Yang said. Noting that the results are still unpublished, Dr. Yang said that the team is drilling down on discovering the best gene targets that could help advance therapies to alleviate the disease.

 

Three potential ways to treat HD

 

Dr. Yang also discussed his outlook for therapies to slow, prevent, or reverse the course of Huntington’s. As noted, he believes that “the stars seem to be aligned” for the development of treatments.

 

In exchanging ideas with other HD scientists, he proposed the model of a stool – which needs four legs to remain stable –  as a metaphor for the benefit of developing multiple therapies (polypharmacy) that could act synergistically for HD.  

 

“If one drug could work for HD, that will be great. However, for many diseases, like HIV or cardiovascular diseases, multiple drugs together can make the disease more manageable, and patients' lives much better.”

 

As of now, Dr. Yang said scientists are developing three potential legs of the therapeutic stool. Each leg represents a new angle in understanding HD and how it might be applied to slow or stop the disease.

 

The first leg: huntingtin lowering

 

As the first leg of the therapeutic stool, Dr. Yang pointed to so-called huntingin lowering – the reduction of the HD gene (DNA), RNA, or its toxic protein in the brain. Pioneered in patients by the above-mentioned Roche/Ionis clinical trial program, this approach has captured the attention of many academic and biopharma labs.

 

This Roche/Ionis drug is an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO), a synthetic strand of DNA that degrades the RNA from making the huntingtin protein. Other clinical trial programs aim to alleviate HD with ASOs, or other DNA or RNA targeting therapies. Some of them using small chemicals to reduce human huntingtin.

 

This approach has received ample coverage in this blog and elsewhere.

 

The second leg: GWAS/mismatch repair genes

 

Dr. Yang pointed to potential therapies based on the HD GWAS genes – which include DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes – as the second leg of the stool.

 

“Lots of companies now are really excited about some of these genes,” Dr. Yang noted. “They are essential for aspects of repairing DNA. There's not much we know yet about the potential efficacy and safety liability of a drug targeting these genes. We and others are actively doing research in these areas.”

 

Dr. Yang said that some of these genes are known to “stabilize” the CAG repeats, which tend to expand in the brain areas affected by HD. Such "somatic" repeat expansion is thought to be a key mechanism in the disease.

 

A gene with great potential is MSH3, a MMR gene under investigation by academic labs and biopharma firms. Before it had to shut down for lack of funding, Triplet Therapeutics had planned to use an ASO to target MSH3 in a clinical trial.

 

“So far, I can tell you MSH3 looks pretty safe, at least in animal models,” Dr. Yang explained.

 

He cautioned that scientists still need to learn more about the basic biology of the HD GWAS DNA repair genes in the brain and select the best targets and therapeutics before advancing them in clinical trials in patients.

 

The third leg: huntingtin protein-protein interaction

 

The third leg of the therapeutic stool, he said, is how the huntingtin protein interacts with other proteins.

 

So far, researchers have discovered at least 100 proteins that could interact with huntingtin, including in different cell types and at different ages, Dr. Yang said. The interactions occur with both the normal and mutant versions of the protein.

 

At least one of these proteins, HAP40, binds very closely with huntingtin. Dr. Yang described HAP40 and huntingtin as “inseparable buddies.” The Yang lab is actively working on the normal function of HAP40 in the brain and whether it could have a modifier role in HD.

 

As with the GWAS genes, Dr. Yang stressed that research on protein-protein interaction and its potential benefit for patients is ongoing. He added that, in the search for potential drugs, the key is finding “a protein that binds to huntingtin and is required for disease, and ideally this protein is amenable to therapeutic intervention.”

 

Aiming to solve one of the ‘central mysteries of HD’

 

The recent HDF workshop’s focus on “cell-type specific biology” in HD took up the question of why certain brain cell types (i.e., neurons in the striatum and cortex) are vulnerable to degeneration.

 

Dr. Yang stated that it is unclear whether research on cell-type vulnerability could become the fourth leg of the therapeutic stool. “Cell-type vulnerability could be related to” the first three legs, “especially protein-protein interaction and GWAS mismatch repair genes.”

 

However, this does not diminish the importance of cell-type vulnerability.

 

“This question of  selective vulnerability is really a key feature for all neurodegenerative diseases,” Dr. Yang said. “So, for Huntington it's a striatal medium spiny neuron and some of the deep-layer cortical pyramidal neurons.” In Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, neuronal cell types in other brain areas are affected.

 

“So the big question is: why, for each disease, certain types of neurons die?” Dr. Yang asked. “If we can understand this fundamental question and elucidate its mechanism, we could use the knowledge to develop new disease-specific therapies to protect neurons from degeneration.   

 

With the workshop, Dr. Yang said, “we think the time is right to revisit what I consider one of the central mysteries for Huntington’s disease – why certain neurons are selectively vulnerable to degeneration despite that mutant huntingtin is expressed in all the cells in the body.”

 

As usual, this group of HD scientists used the workshop to explore new ways to solve this mystery and develop potential therapies.

 


At the HDF workshop: seated, from left to right, Mahmoud Pouladi, M.Sc., Ph.D., Osama Al Dalahmah, M.D., Ph.D., Ashley Robbins, Gene Veritas (aka Kenneth P. Serbin), Sarah Hernandez, Ph.D., William Yang, M.D., Ph.D. Standing, from left to right, Xinhong Chen, Andrew Yoo, Ph.D., Anton Reiner, Ph.D., Baljit Khakh, Ph.D., Nicole Calakos, M.D., Ph.D., Ed Lein, Ph.D., Beverly Davidson, Ph.D., Nathaniel Heintz, Ph.D., Harry Orr, Ph.D., Leslie Thompson, Ph.D., Myriam Heiman, Ph.D., Shawn Davidson, Ph.D., Steven Finkbeiner, M.D., Ph.D., Roy Maimon, Ph.D. (photo by Julie Porter, HDF)

 

Bonding with the scientists

 

Following our interview and tour of the lab, I made a PowerPoint presentation to Dr. Yang and other members of the lab: “Advocating for the care and cure of Huntington’s disease: a biosocial journey.”

 

I spoke about my family’s struggles with HD, my advocacy, and my deepening interest in the social and scientific history of the HD movement. Afterwards, I answered questions.

 

Once again, I bonded with a fellow Yale graduate immersed in the fight against Huntington’s disease and scientists dedicated to a cure.

 

 

The X. William Yang Research Group after hearing Gene Veritas speak on his Huntington’s disease story. Seated (from left to right) Chris Park, Ph.D., Xiaofeng Gu, M.D., Ph.D., Dr. Yang, Gene Veritas, Nan Wang, Ph.D. Standing (from left to right) Ming Yan, MPH, Masood Akram, Ph.D., Tien Phat Huynh, M.D., Ph.D., Daniel Lee, Ph.D., Nianxin Zhong, Henry Chen, Lalini Ramanathan, Ph.D., Alexandra Shambayate, Leonardo Dionisio, Amberlene De La Rocha, Linna Deng Ferguson

 

Thanks to Emily Farrell, Executive Assistant, Department of History, University of San Diego, for assistance with the interview transcript.

 

Disclosures: the Hereditary Disease Foundation covered my travel expenses to Los Angeles. In support of the HD cause, I hold a symbolic number of Ionis shares.

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

At CHDI conference, advocates inspire acceleration of quest for Huntington’s disease therapies

 

With a record 420-plus participants, the 19th Annual Huntington’s Disease Therapeutics Conference got under way on February 26 with the aim of speeding the quest for therapies to slow, halt, or reverse the symptoms of this incurable disorder.

 

Sponsored by CHDI Foundation, Inc., the largest private funder of HD research, the event runs through February 29 at the Parker hotel in Palm Springs, CA, and will feature three days of scientific and clinical presentations.

 

“In recent years the quest for HD therapeutics that will make a real difference to affected families has accelerated and deepened,” CHDI Chief Scientific Officer Robert Pacifici, Ph.D., wrote in a welcome letter to the participants. “Accelerated in the sense that every week seems to bring new scientific insight, whether from publications or reports on new and ongoing clinical initiatives. Deepened in the sense of the sophistication of our understanding of the underlying HD biology that informs our drug development work.”

 

HD research has also “broadened,” Dr. Pacifici added, noting that participants are displaying a record 140-plus posters. Representatives from 55 pharmaceutical and biotech companies and 69 academic institutions will take part.

 

In his letter and opening remarks to the conference, Dr. Pacifici outlined how CHDI has reorganized its scientific-thematic approach to “better align” its activities “with this burgeoning body of knowledge.”

 

The conference, following such themes, will focus on new research into the roles of mutant huntingtin DNA, RNA, and protein in HD. Conference-goers also will focus on the hot topic of somatic instability, the tendency of the deleterious expansion of the DNA to worsen with age and therefore trigger disease onset.

 

A caregiver’s moving keynote and a vital TED Talk

 

Following Dr. Pacifici’s overview, the audience watched a deeply moving 80-minute keynote speech, not to be shared publicly, by Cheryl Sullivan Stavely, RN. Stavely recounted her 30-plus years as an advocate and caregiver to her late husband John and daughter Meghan, who both succumbed to HD.

 

Stavely thanked the scientists for their dedication and said she hoped that 30 years from now HD conferences will become unnecessary with the development of treatments.

 

Choking up at Stavely’s recollections of Meghan, I found the keynote highly effective in summing up the many health and social challenges faced by HD-affected people and their families such as the affected person losing the ability to work and making insurance and end-of-life arrangements.

 

Scroll to the end of this article for photos of Stavely’s presentation and others.

 

Earlier, I interviewed leading HD global advocate, Emmy Award winning television journalist, and fellow HD gene expansion carrier Charles Sabine about his compelling TED Talk “The Unlimited Capability of Every Human.” Launched on February 1, the talk already has had 4,500 views.

 

Sabine stressed the importance of making the presentation “gather viral momentum” and transform the way HD is viewed by the general public everywhere. I will explore the implications of Sabine’s vital talk in a future article.

 

Stay tuned for further coverage of the therapeutics conference. 

 


Displaying a slide of daughter Meghan, Cheryl Sullivan Stavely delivers the keynote address at the 19th HD Therapeutics Conference, February 26, 2024 (this and the photos below by Gene Veritas, aka Kenneth P. Serbin).



The audience watching Stavely's presentation


Cheryl Sullivan Stavely and husband Kevin Stavely

 

Leslie Thompson, Ph.D., of the University of California, Irvine, greeting Kevin and Cheryl Stavely

 

Stavely with Karen Anderson, M.D., of Georgetown University

 


Stavely (left) with Haiying Tang, Ph.D., of CHDI and Wenzhen Duan, M.D., Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins University
 

Wednesday, November 08, 2023

New book by longtime advocate describes Milton Wexler’s incomparable contributions to Huntington’s disease research and beyond

 

A new book portrays the largely unexplored personal and psychological context of the quest to understand and defeat Huntington’s disease: a biographical memoir of Milton Wexler (1908-2007), the founder of the Hereditary Disease Foundation (HDF) and key mover in the discovery of the HD gene.

 

In late 2022, Wexler’s daughter, historian Alice Wexler, published The Analyst: A Daughter’s Memoir (Columbia University Press). She is a longtime Huntington’s disease advocate and chronicler of the cause.

 

The Analyst adds unique dimensions to HD history, building on Alice’s groundbreaking work. In 1995 she authored Mapping Fate: a memoir of family, risk, and genetic research (first published by Random House and Times Books, then reissued by the University of California Press). In 2008, she wrote The Woman Who Walked into the Sea: Huntington’s and the Making of a Genetic Disease (Yale University Press).

 

This year marks the 30th anniversary of the discovery of the huntingtin gene, announced in March 1993. Through the HDF and in collaboration with a global team of scientists, Milton and his neuropsychologist daughter Nancy, Alice’s sister, spearheaded the hunt for the gene, as recounted in Mapping Fate. In The Woman Who Walked into the Sea, Alice explored the social and medical history of HD in the 19th and 20th centuries, helping explain the stigma HD families still face.

 

The sisters’ mother Leonore was diagnosed with HD at the age of 53 in 1968. That led Milton to immediately start the HDF, which focused on the development of treatments.

 

In 1993 the discovery of huntingtin “immediately transformed Huntington’s research,” Alice writes in The Analyst. “Suddenly it was possible for researchers to make animal and cell models and study how the gene worked at the cellular and molecular level. They could test drugs and other molecules in mice and sheep, fish and flies, as well as in human beings.”

 

Milton was “ecstatic and also relieved,” Alice recalls. “We even allowed ourselves to imagine that a treatment, and possibly a cure, might be on the horizon.” HDF-sponsored researchers and other scientists around the globe are still striving to achieve that goal.

 


 

Meeting’s life’s difficult challenges

 

Drawing on access to her father’s extensive personal correspondence, her diary, and archival sources enabled Alice, with decades of hindsight, to present her father’s story – in which the fight against HD became his life mission – in intimate detail.

 

Describing Milton, Alice is meticulous, often critical, but always loving – a reflection of the complex relationship of a highly successful professional with daughters that he wanted the best for and whose lives he fought for. She adds a valuable feminist perspective, for example, interpreting her father’s friendships by analyzing masculinity and male intimacy in the 1950s.

 

In addition to Milton’s incomparable contributions to HD research, The Analyst depicts key aspects of American life in the second half of the 20th century. It delves into Jewish life in Brooklyn, which spurred Milton’s ambitions, taking him to Kansas and then to Los Angeles.

 

Portraying her father’s main career as a psychoanalyst, Alice helps to rescue the history of a field that has lost relevance with the emergence of other forms of therapy, though it continues as an intellectual field. Milton saw great value in psychoanalysis’s way of helping people understand their emotions but he increasingly practiced more direct forms of therapy, focused on the here-and-now. As he put it, “insight alone does not change behavior.”

 

Alice demonstrates how much of Milton's early career trying to understand and treat schizophrenia helped him to confront this other knotty problem, HD.

 

In an appendix, The Analyst lists “sayings of Milton Wexler” – including a 1998 note to a President Bill Clinton in crisis – regarding challenges such as the loss of a child, self-defeat, depression, personal identity, loneliness, and risk for a disease such as HD.

 

Milton’s embrace of talk therapy is a key reminder for HD families overwhelmed by the disease's  many social and personal challenges that help is available, and that individual and family therapy can make a difference. He believed that people should not have to struggle on their own.

 

In Los Angeles, Milton became a therapist for many in the arts and entertainment – a practice that he parlayed into significant donations for the HDF.

 

(Click here to read more about my own journey with psychoanalysis as an aid to fighting HD.)

 

‘The nightmare is the children’

 

With new material and perspective, Alice expands on the difficult moments described in Mapping Fate regarding  Leonore’s diagnosis, Milton’s deep fears that his daughters would be affected, and his  “frantic search for information” about HD and scientific contacts that in a matter of weeks spurred the concept of the HDF.

 

Leonore’s diagnosis and HD were “the great poison in my life,” Milton wrote his brother Henry in May 1968 in a letter uncovered by Alice. “But the nightmare is the children.[…] For me there is only dread in the air.”

 

Milton divorced Leonore but nevertheless cared for her impeccably and guaranteed her financial security. Leonore died in 1978 at 63, ten years after her diagnosis..

 

Providing intellectual fuel

 

With his background in psychology and prior experience as an attorney, Milton advocated for a multidisciplinary approach to solving HD and other neurological disorders. He championed the interplay of psychoanalysis and neuroscience in a move critical for HD research. He also grasped the growing importance of molecular genetics and its potential value for Huntington’s.

 

From this perspective Milton developed unique HDF workshops involving informal, spontaneous discussion – as opposed to dry scientific presentations with slides – as the main driver of the search for the HD gene and the quest for treatments. The first took place in 1971. Held in hotel rooms or at universities, these gatherings typically involved 15 to 20 participants.

 

As Alice reports, Milton believed that real creativity resulted from “casual conversation and carefree association among people in the same or related disciplines.”

 

While finding prestigious veteran scientists for HDF’s advisory board, Milton recruited younger researchers, including women, as the organization’s intellectual fuel.

 

As Alice observes, the HDF formed part of a trend in which “philanthropy assumed an increasingly influential role in funding science and meeting social needs.” Contributions to the HDF swelled. It established an endowment to fund future workshops and critical research grants.

 

The challenges of genetic testing

 

Alice reflects on her family’s monumental role in finding the gene and also the irony that neither she nor her sister chose to get the genetic test – a test which “opened a Pandora’s box of legal, social, and ethical challenges and raised many personal questions for Nancy and me.”

 

The test developed shortly after the 1993 discovery of huntingtin enabled 100 percent accuracy in detecting the HD mutation. Prior to this, research had established that each child of an affected parent has a 50-50 chance of inheriting that mutation. As Alice showed in The Woman Who Walked into the Sea, deep stigma and discrimination increased around HD in the 1900s.

 

“None of us considered the possibility of the genetic test to resolve the uncertainty,” Alice writes, referring to the time when she began noticing subtle changes in Nancy. “For all our knowledge of psychology, we turned to denial, that most primitive of defenses. We worried, we wondered, and then we denied. It simply could not be.”

 

Indeed, to this day, only about ten percent of persons at risk for HD choose to be tested.

 

At 81, Alice has not developed symptoms. In 2020, Nancy revealed her HD diagnosis to the New York Times. At 78, she bravely struggles with HD symptoms yet keeps abreast of the latest scientific developments. She now works with a writer on her memoir.

 

Solidarity and hope

 

Along with Mapping Fate and The Woman Who Walked into the Sea, Alice’s warm portrayal of her father in The Analyst shows how he helped the HD community advance in understanding the disorder and seek anxiously awaited treatments to slow, stop, or reverse the disease.

 

Milton lived a full, fascinating, and challenging life, dying peacefully in 2007 at age 98, at Alice and Nancy’s side. In multiple ways, he serves as a model – especially for the idea that when faced with an enormous and difficult challenge, becoming an activist can be the best form of  therapy.

 

The legacy of the discovery of huntingtin, as well as HDF’s scientific leadership, help build solidarity and hope for a better future for HD and all other neurodegenerative diseases.

 

 

Milton Wexler flanked by daughters Nancy (left) and Alice in 1992 (photo by Mariana Cook)