CAR T-cell therapy may slow ALS progression

Researchers are exploring CAR T-cell therapy to slow the advancement of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by targeting overactive immune cells in the brain. The approach aims to reduce neuron damage without curing the disease. Early studies suggest potential benefits for other neurodegenerative conditions as well.

Genetically engineered immune cells, known as CAR-T cells, could help slow the progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a neurodegenerative condition that leads to the loss of motor neurons controlling voluntary muscles. ALS, also called Lou Gehrig’s disease, has a life expectancy of two to five years after diagnosis, with fewer than 10 percent of patients surviving more than a decade. While treatments exist for the 5 to 10 percent of cases caused by genetic mutations, sporadic forms—which make up the majority—lack effective therapies.

Evidence points to brain inflammation as a key factor in motor neuron death. Specifically, immune cells called microglia can become overactive, removing too many synapses and contributing to neuron loss. Davide Trotti at the Jefferson Weinberg ALS Center in Pennsylvania explains that these "damage-amplifying microglia" display high levels of a protein called uPAR on their surface, acting as a tag for targeting.

Trotti's team has developed CAR-T cells engineered to recognize uPAR and eliminate these rogue microglia. In lab studies with cultured cells, the therapy killed the problematic cells without harming neurons. "It’s not a way to cure the disease," Trotti says. "The goal is slowing down the disease."

Current experiments involve mice with an ALS-causing mutation, with results anticipated in about a year. If promising, regulators may fast-track human trials given the disease's severity. Ammar Al-Chalabi at King’s College London notes, "The evidence for immune dysfunction in ALS is mounting. This seems a very promising and interesting approach to me."

The method might extend to other conditions involving similar microglia, such as certain dementias. However, CAR-T cells carry risks of serious side effects and high costs due to personalized manufacturing, though efforts are underway to improve safety and affordability.

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Illustration of a German woman achieving complete remission from three autoimmune diseases via groundbreaking CAR-T therapy, symbolizing hope and medical triumph.
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CAR-T therapy achieves complete remission of three autoimmune diseases in German woman

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A 47-year-old woman bedridden with autoimmune hemolytic anemia, immune thrombocytopenia, and antiphospholipid syndrome has achieved complete remission after CAR-T cell therapy at University Hospital Erlangen in Germany. Treated by Fabian Müller after nine failed therapies, she recovered rapidly and remains healthy over a year later without medication—the first simultaneous treatment of multiple autoimmune diseases with this method.

Scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai report an experimental CAR T-cell strategy that targets tumor-associated macrophages—the immune cells many tumors use as a protective shield—rather than attacking cancer cells directly. In preclinical mouse models of metastatic ovarian and lung cancer, the approach reshaped the tumor microenvironment and extended survival, with some animals showing complete tumor clearance, according to a study published online January 22 in Cancer Cell.

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Researchers report that a single injection of a modified herpes virus draws immune cells deep into glioblastoma tumors, leading to longer survival in a clinical trial. The therapy, tested on 41 patients with recurrent brain cancer, activates T cells that persist and attack cancer cells. Findings were published in Cell.

Researchers report that tanycytes—specialized cells lining the brain’s third ventricle—can help move tau protein from cerebrospinal fluid into the bloodstream, and that signs of tanycyte disruption in Alzheimer’s patient tissue may be associated with impaired tau removal. The findings, published March 5 in Cell Press Blue, are based on animal and cell experiments and analyses of human brain samples.

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Doctors at Keck Medicine of USC are implanting lab-grown, dopamine-producing cells into the brains of people with Parkinson’s disease in an early-stage clinical trial that will enroll up to 12 participants across three U.S. sites.

Researchers at the University of California, Irvine report that a machine-learning system called SIGNET can infer cause-and-effect links between genes in human brain tissue, revealing extensive rewiring of gene regulation—especially in excitatory neurons—in Alzheimer’s disease.

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University of Michigan researchers using fruit flies report that changes in sugar metabolism can influence whether injured neurons and their axons deteriorate or persist. The work, published in *Molecular Metabolism*, describes a context-dependent response involving the proteins DLK and SARM1 that can briefly slow axon degeneration after injury, a finding the team says could inform future strategies for neurodegenerative disease research.

 

 

 

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