Abstract
Abstract
Background
Leigh syndrome, an inherited neurometabolic disorder, is estimated to be the most common pediatric manifestation of mitochondrial disease. No treatments are currently available for Leigh syndrome due to many hurdles in drug discovery efforts. Leigh syndrome causal variants span over 110 different genes and likely lead to both unique and shared biochemical alterations, often resulting in overlapping phenotypic features. The mechanisms by which pathogenic variants in mitochondrial genes alter cellular phenotype to promote disease remain poorly understood. The rarity of cases of specific causal variants creates barriers to drug discovery and adequately sized clinical trials.
Body
To address the current challenges in drug discovery and facilitate communication between researchers, healthcare providers, patients, and families, the Boston University integrative Cardiovascular Metabolism and Pathophysiology (iCAMP) Lab and Cure Mito Foundation hosted a Leigh Syndrome Symposium. This symposium brought together expert scientists and providers to highlight the current successes in drug discovery and novel models of mitochondrial disease, and to connect patients to providers and scientists to foster community and communication.
Conclusion
In this symposium review, we describe the research presented, the hurdles ahead, and strategies to better connect the Leigh syndrome community members to advance treatments for Leigh syndrome.
Funder
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Genetics (clinical),General Medicine
Cited by
1 articles.
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