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Published in: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 8/2016

01-12-2016 | Editorial

Translational medicine: from disease- and patient-specific stem cell research to clinical trials and back again

Authors: Matthias Jung, Dan Rujescu

Published in: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | Issue 8/2016

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Excerpt

Psychiatric diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are among the major causes of suffering and death in the USA, in Europe, and in other industrialized countries as well. The number of patients is growing in correlation with the number of elderly people in our society. Particularly, the risk for Alzheimer’s disease is strongly elevated with the age of people. Accordingly, there is a growing interest in our aging society. The United States National Institute of Health provides a database (clinicaltrials.gov), which currently lists many clinical trials analyzing a variety of chemical compounds for the treatment of AD. There are promising results in preclinical studies and early clinical trials for therapeutic drugs or antibodies, but the most of the studies have been withdrawn or failed to work in patients. The high number of failed clinical trials highlights the fact that drug development is predominantly affected by the difficult translation of animal models into the human system. Psychiatric diseases most often are multifactorial. Research in the field of human genetics revealed that DNA variations including copy number variations (CNVs), single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and functional homozygous mutations confer a risk for psychiatric diseases. DNA variations influence their onset, progression, and their treatment. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) recently described by a variety of genetic loci in European and American cohorts. The technological advance in the field of RNA and DNA sequencing will further accelerate and enlarge the execution of such studies. Additionally, meta-analysis projects and epidemiological research provide strongly growing scientific fields for psychiatric diseases. Currently, many studies are carried out focusing on DNA variations as risk factors, which may provide a target for drug development. Even the analysis of risk loci with unknown function provides a target for drug development by the application of phenotype-based approaches. New promising approaches for drug development arise from the analysis of the disease- and patient-specific genetic background. The complex and multigenic mechanisms, which confer a risk for certain diseases, are poorly understood, but DNA variations as well as mutations found in psychiatric patients are suggested to provide potential targets for drug development. Cellular two-dimensional and organotypic three-dimensional stem cell-based in vitro models hold a great promise for the functional characterization of DNA variations necessary for further advance in the field of translational medicine aiming at the transfer of neuroscience research from bench to bedside. Rodents are broadly and increasingly applied for disease modeling, but notably these animals poorly mimic complex human diseases. Even though at a first glance organ development in rodents and humans is roughly comparable, there are many significant differences in molecular and cellular mechanisms regulating development and function of human organs, especially of the human brain. Accordingly, the analysis of disease mechanisms is limited by these species-specific differences. One can conclude that species-specific differences most probably represent a major road block during drug development. The same holds true for toxicological testings. Many tests in rodents or other animals did not faithfully represent the human response. …
Metadata
Title
Translational medicine: from disease- and patient-specific stem cell research to clinical trials and back again
Authors
Matthias Jung
Dan Rujescu
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience / Issue 8/2016
Print ISSN: 0940-1334
Electronic ISSN: 1433-8491
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-016-0742-1

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