Weizmann Institute Scientists
Block Loss of Eyesight in Animals With Glaucoma-Like Disease
March 7, 2001
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NEW YORK, March 7 (AScribe News) -- Weizmann Institute scientists
have succeeded in stopping the progressive loss of eyesight
in animals with a glaucoma-like disease. Their innovative study,
reported in the March 6, 2001 issue of the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences U.S.A., suggests that Copaxone,
a drug developed at the Weizmann Institute of Science to treat
multiple sclerosis, may also stop, or at least slow down, the
loss of eyesight in people with chronic glaucoma.
Glaucoma, which affects 1 percent of the adult population,
is the main cause of blindness in adults. The majority of patients
with chronic glaucoma have increased pressure inside the eye
due to defective drainage of the transparent fluid that bathes
the eye and nourishes its outer cells. The increase in this
intraocular pressure (IOP) damages the optic nerve, causing
it to degenerate and often leading to loss of eyesight.
For many years, the search for improved glaucoma therapies
focused on correcting the eye's drainage system to reduce IOP.
Eventually, however, it became clear that reducing the pressure
was not enough to halt the ongoing degeneration of the optic
nerve and did not eliminate the risk of blindness. Scientists
concluded that a crucial factor was being overlooked and they
set out in search of this missing link.
Approximately five years ago, Prof. Michal Schwartz of the
Weizmann Institute's Neurobiology Department proposed a new
concept to account for the continuing degeneration of the optic
nerve that occurs after the pressure in the eye had been reduced.
Schwartz suggested that while the initial damage to the optic
nerve is indeed caused by increased eye pressure, secondary
factors triggered by the initial damage contribute to the nerve's
ongoing degeneration. The offending factors include chemicals
that play an important role in the life of a healthy nerve,
but when the nerve degenerates, their concentrations increase
to a toxic level. One of these chemicals is the neurotransmitter
glutamate, which spills from damaged nerve cells and adversely
affects healthy neighboring cells.
In line with this concept, Prof. Schwartz developed an original
strategy for tackling the problem. To protect the nerve from
harmful substances coming from the body itself, she recruited
the immune system, whose well-known role is to defend the body
against outside "invaders." This approach at first raised a
few eyebrows, mainly because it involved cells that, when activated,
usually cause one of the autoimmune diseases in which the body
mistakenly attacks itself, such as juvenile diabetes or multiple
sclerosis. The concept of using these "enemy" cells to heal
the body seemed uncanny.
Prof. Schwartz, who has also developed an immune-based therapy
for spinal cord injuries now being tested in a clinical trial,
believes that- contrary to accepted wisdom-autoimmunity can
play a beneficial role in the body. A series of studies in her
lab has shown that immunization with fragments of proteins belonging
to myelin, the protective sheath of the nerves, can prevent
degeneration of the damaged optic nerve. However, the use of
such protein fragments, or peptides, for immunizing people is
fraught with risk because some of these peptides cause the immune
system to attack nerve fibers, leading to multiple sclerosis.
Since humans vary greatly in their genetic makeup, it is difficult
to establish which of the peptides would cause disease in a
specific patient.
Looking for a safe alternative to these peptides, Schwartz
and her group, in collaboration with Profs. Irun Cohen and Michael
Sela of the Weizmann Institute's Immunology Department, demonstrated
that immunization with Copaxone, a synthetic compound that reacts
with cells that respond to self-proteins, protects the damaged
optic nerve from neuronal degeneration. Copaxone was developed
at the Institute by Dr. Dvora Teitelbaum, Prof. Ruth Arnon and
Prof. Michael Sela as a drug for multiple sclerosis.
In the present study, the scientists sought to establish
how Copaxone produces its protective effect on the nerve. This
research -- conducted by Prof. Schwartz, Dr. Eti Yoles and graduate
students Jonathan Kipnis and Hadas Schori -- showed that immunization
with Copaxone shields the nerve from the toxic effects of the
neurotransmitter glutamate. These findings strongly suggest
that Copaxone immunization is a potential therapy for glaucoma,
in which the optic nerve undergoes degeneration and glutamate
levels rise. Indeed, in another series of experiments conducted
together with scientists from the U.S. company Allergan, Inc.
(who developed the rat model that simulates chronic glaucoma),
Copaxone immunization proved even more effective. In rats immunized
with a single injection of Copaxone, only about 4 percent of
nerve cells died in the glaucoma- affected eye, compared with
28 percent in rats that were not immunized. Thus, immunization
with Copaxone dramatically protected the nerve from pressure-induced
death.
Following the success of this research, trials in human patients
with glaucoma are expected to begin soon. Scientists hope that
the trials will be facilitated by the fact that the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration has already approved Copaxone.
Prof. Michal Schwartz holds the Maurice and Ilse Katz Chair
of Neuroimmunology. Her research is supported by the Alan T.
Brown Foundation to Cure Paralysis, the Glaucoma Research Foundation
and the Jerome and Binette Lipper Award.
The Weizmann Institute of Science, in Rehovot, Israel, is
one of the world's foremost centers of scientific research and
graduate study. Its 2,500 scientists, students, technicians
and engineers pursue basic research in the quest for knowledge
and to enhance the quality of human life. New ways of fighting
disease and hunger, protecting the environment, and harnessing
alternative sources of energy are high priorities at Weizmann.