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About this time, two facts became known. First, the enzyme has sugar side-chains attached to amino acid backbone of its structure. Second, macrophages react with enzymes whose sugar chains end with the sugar called "mannose." The problem was that the mannose on the sugar side chains of glucocerebrosidase was inside of the chains, not on the end of the chains. The mannose therefore could not interact with macrophages. Dr. Brady's team needed to develop a method to strip off some of the sugars on the ends of the side chains to expose the mannose, which would allow the enzyme to bind to the macrophages.

In the first clinical trial with macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase, eight people with Gaucher disease received a fixed dose of the modified enzyme. Only the smallest one - a child - experienced beneficial effects. His hemoglobin and platelet counts increased; the size of his spleen and liver decreased; and the damage to his bones lessened. The other seven people were adults and had not received enough of the enzyme to improve their condition.

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Photograph of Dr. Peter Pentchev
Dr. Peter Pentchev Hemoglobin chart showing the increase of hemoglobin counts in a patient in the first clinical trial with macrophage targeted glucocerebrosidaseImage Removed
Hemoglobin Chart


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Photograph of Dr. Roscoe Brady examining a young child
Dr. Roscoe Brady examining a young child

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Photograph of a young man receiving gene therapy
Gene Therapy Experiment


Brady's team then selected a different dose amount of replacement enzyme for a trial of twelve people with Gaucher disease. All of these people had strikingly good clinical responses within a few months. For example, their height and weight increased; their anemia improved; their liver and spleen sizes decreased; and their bone damage lessened. Because of these findings, macrophage-targeted glucocerebrosidase was approved as a specific treatment for Gaucher disease by the Federal Drug Administration on April 5, 1991. Enzyme replacement therapy worked.

In a few short years, people with Gaucher disease were able to receive the enzyme replacement therapy at home. Enzyme replacement therapy is an effective treatment for most people with Type 1 Gaucher disease.

Dr. Brady is conducting genetic research to provide a cure for all people with Gaucher disease. At the National Institutes of Health in May 1995, a young man with Gaucher disease received the first gene therapy for that disease. He received back his own cells into which the correct genes for making the enzyme glucocerebrosidase had been inserted. He had no adverse reaction, proving the safety of the procedure. Current trials are attempting to determine the efficacy of gene therapy for Gaucher disease.

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 Hemoglobin chart showing the increase of hemoglobin counts in a patient in the first clinical trial with macrophage targeted glucocerebrosidaseImage Added
Hemoglobin Chart

Before and after x-rays of an arm
Before and after X-Rays