FDA approves 2nd gene therapy cancer drug from Durham’s Precision Bio for clinical trial – WRAL Tech Wire

DURHAM Precision BioSciences, a genome-editing company based in Durham, has received authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationto advance its second genome-edited cancer therapy to clinical trials.

The FDA has accepted Precisions Investigational New Drug application for PBCAR20A to treat non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CCL), and small lymphocytic lymphoma (SSL).

Precisions technology is part of a new approach to fighting cancer using T cells a type of immune system cell that recognizes invading germs or cancer cells. T cells are engineered to carry a cancer bullet called a tumor-targetingchimericantigenreceptor (CAR). These engineered cells have the potential to save the lives of many patients unresponsive to traditional chemotherapy and radiation regimens.

Precision Biosciences

Autologous CAR T therapies currently on the market rely on patient-derived T cells, which are extracted and individually manufactured for each patient using that patients own cells. They require a complex and lengthy process.

Precisions allogeneic CAR T product candidates use T cells derived from qualified donors. The T cells are manufactured in large batches and are cryopreserved (safely preserved, intact, at extremely low temperatures) for shipment, storage and off-the-shelf use.

These allogeneic CAR T product candidates rely on Precisions ARCUS genome-editing platform to remove the T cell receptor to prevent graft versus host disease without the need for donor-patient matching. ARCUS editing also enables targeted insertion of the CAR gene into a single, specific location in the T cell genome for more controlled, consistent expression.

Pfizers 300 new jobs, $500M investment symbolize Triangles growth as gene therapy hub

The company said it will begin a Phase1/2a clinical trial later this year in non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients, including a subset of patients with a cancer called mantle cell lymphoma, for which Precision has received the FDAs Orphan Drug designation.

PBCAR20A is Precisions second off-the-shelf cell therapy. The company is also studying the precursor to PBCAR20A PBCAR0191 in adult patients who are not responding to other therapies. Technically, these are designated as patients with relapsed or refractory (R/R) NHL or R/R B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL).

Both of Precisions treatments use the companys ARCUS genome editing technology to produce CAR T cells derived from healthy donors, rather than relying on cancer patients own blood. The development of these allogeneic CAR Ts is designed to overcome the manufacturing limitations of traditional autologous CAR T therapies, to target a broader range of malignancies, and to increase the number of patients who can potentially benefit.

FDA clearance to begin clinical trials with our anti-CD20 off-the-shelf therapy candidate is a significant milestone for Precision, said Matt Kane, the companys CEO and co-founder. Todays announcement demonstrates our ability to advance multiple product candidates in parallel into the clinic, leveraging the unique capabilities of our ARCUS genome editing platform, CAR T development approach and highly differentiated manufacturing process developed in-house.

Precision uses ARCUS to remove T cell receptors to prevent graft versus host disease, thus avoiding the need for donor-patient matching that is required in traditional tissue donation procedures. And the ARCUS technology also provides for the targeted insertion of the CAR gene into a single, specific location in the T cell genome for controlled, consistent expression. Precisions product candidates can be made in advance, manufactured in large batches and then cryopreserved for shipment, storage and off-the-shelf use.

AskBio gets $235 million in gene therapy support

PBCAR20A, if approved, will fill an important gap in current cancer treatments. In the United States, B-cell malignancies account for 85 percent of all non-Hodgkin lymphoma. And CLL and SLL represent 25 to 30 percent of leukemia cases. Precision said that, while front-line treatments benefit more than half of newly diagnosed NHL patients, at least a third of those achieve only partial remission or relapse after remission.And patients with CLL have limited success with autologous CAR T therapies. An allogeneic CAR T like PBCAR20A may overcome treatment resistance and offer the possibility of combination treatments.

It is our hope that PBCAR20A will provide a new allogeneic CAR T therapy option with the benefits of reliable, off-the-shelf access and optimized cellular activity to patients living with NHL or CLL/SLL, where a significant need for new treatment options remains, said David Thomson, Precisions chief development officer.

Precision Biosciences is a 2006 Duke University spin-out dedicated to improving life by using its ARCUS gene editing technology to treat human diseases and create healthy and sustainable food and agriculture solutions.

In 2018 the company created a new name and brand identity for its food and agriculture business,Elo Life Systems. The business is using Precisions ARCUS platform and other new technologies for applications in crop improvement, animal genetics, industrial biotechnology and sustainable agriculture.

(C) N.C. Biotech Center

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FDA approves 2nd gene therapy cancer drug from Durham's Precision Bio for clinical trial - WRAL Tech Wire

7-Year-Old Receives New FDA-Approved Retina Gene Therapy – University of Michigan Health System News

Kari Branham, M.S., a genetic counselor at Kellogg, worked with Zions family to help them understand the genetic basis for Zions condition.

SEE ALSO: Retinitis Pigmentosa in Children: 5 Facts Families Should Know

We have seen such amazing progress with these conditions over the last 15-20 years,says Branham. We used to tell patients and their families that we would have to wait and see what happens, but now we can actually do something to help.

By going through the gene therapy process, Branham says the team is hopeful that this has changed Zions prognosis.

The treatment is designed to stop or slow the death of specialized cells in the retina, called photoreceptors, that send visual information to the brain.

Patients who have Leber congenital amaurosis have night blindness, says Besirli. One of the first treatment effects after receiving Luxturna is that (patients) are telling us that they function much better in dark.

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They can play outside much longer, they can navigate around the house and dont need nightlights anymore and can participate in indoor sports. Thats been a huge change in their lives.

Seven months after treatment, Zion, now age 7, and his family are back to their normal routine in Montrose, Mich., and monitor his progress during follow-up appointments at Kellogg.

Zion says hes looking forward to playing football and, with improved vision -- playing outside at night with his brothers.

We hope that with Zion we have changed the trajectory for him to the point that in his 20s he wont have significant vision loss we see with him now, says Branham.

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7-Year-Old Receives New FDA-Approved Retina Gene Therapy - University of Michigan Health System News

First Patient Dosed in Trial of Fabry Gene Therapy Candidate FLT190 – Fabry Disease News

The first patient in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial of Fabry disease gene therapy candidate FLT190 has been dosed.

Enrollment is ongoing at the Royal Free Hospital, in London, U.K. More information and contacts are available here.

Fabry disease iscausedby a faulty GLAgene, which provides instructions to make an enzyme called alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-GAL A). When mutated, this gene leads to abnormal alpha-GAL A function, which results in the build-up of lipids (fatty molecules) known as globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) and globotriaosylsphingosine (LysoGb3) that can damage the heart, kidneys, or liver.

Freelines FLT190 is a gene therapy that uses an adeno-associated virus (AAV8) a harmless virus that does not cause disease or infection as a vehicle to deliver a healthy copy of the GLAgene in the hopes it will induce the production of normal alpha-GAL A. In contrast to the regular infusions of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), this gene therapy is designed to be given in a single dose.

The international, multi-center MARVEL1 study (NCT04040049) will primarily study the safety of FLT190 in up to 12 adult male patients with classic (type 1) Fabry disease, as well as whether it results in continuous production of high levels of alpha-GAL A. Other goals include clearance of Gb3 and LysoGb3, alterations in kidney and skin biopsies, renal and cardiac function, assessing immune responses, and quality of life.

After taking FLT190 via slow intravenous infusion, participants will be monitored for nine months at outpatient visits, and then enter a long-term follow-up period. Both previously and untreated patients will be included, although in two separate parts dose escalation and dose expansion.

MARVEL1 is the first trial of an AAV-based gene therapy for Fabry disease, according to the company. The trial is estimated to end by March 2021.

The initiation of this clinical study is an important event for the patient community. I am hopeful that the promising preclinical data will translate into long term benefit for patients with Fabry [disease], Derralynn Hughes, MD, PhD, said in a press release. Hughes isa Fabry disease expert and senior lecturer at Royal Free Hospital.

Preclinical results in a mouse model of the disease revealed that a single injection of FLT190 into the blood led to a sustained increase of more than 1,000-fold in alpha-Gal A levels, compared to healthy mice. The levels of Gb3 were reduced markedly in the kidney, spleen and heart, as were those of LysoGb3, which have been suggested as anaccurate biomarker to diagnose and track Fabry disease. No adverse side effects were found.

Chris Hollowood, Freelines executive chairman, said that starting MARVEL1 and dosing the first patient is a significant milestone for the company.Continuous high expression of [alpha-GAL A] holds the potential for better treatment outcomes than is seen with ERT, the current standard of care. We believe we can access high expression at relatively low doses.

Besides Fabry disease, Freeline also is testing its AAV technology in hemophilia B, in which a Phase 2/3 trial (NCT03641703) is evaluating whether the potential gene therapy FLT180a is safe and provides long-term production of the clotting protein missing in these patients (factor IX).

These innovative gene therapies have the potential to change patients lives, Hollowood said.

Jos is a science news writer with a PhD in Neuroscience from Universidade of Porto, in Portugal. He has also studied Biochemistry at Universidade do Porto and was a postdoctoral associate at Weill Cornell Medicine, in New York, and at The University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada. His work has ranged from the association of central cardiovascular and pain control to the neurobiological basis of hypertension, and the molecular pathways driving Alzheimers disease.

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First Patient Dosed in Trial of Fabry Gene Therapy Candidate FLT190 - Fabry Disease News

Bluebird bio reveals further encouraging data for CALD gene therapy – PMLiVE

Last year, Bluebird Bio claimed anFDA breakthrough designation for its Lenti-D gene therapy for cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD) it has now revealed additional data to support a fast-track approval.

The updated results from the biotechs phase 2/3 Starbeam study were revealed at the European Paediatric Neurology Society (EPNS) congress in Athens, Greece.

CALD is caused by progressive destruction of the myelin sheath that surrounds nerves responsible for thinking and muscle control, resulting in a relentless deterioration that typically leads to a vegetative state or death within a few years of diagnosis. The condition mostly affects young males, with the majority of patients dying before the age of ten.

The only current treatment for the disease is stem cell transplant, but it carries a significant risk from the high-dose chemotherapy used to prepare patients for the procedure. Other potential complications include graft-versus-host (GvHD) disease, when the transplanted cells recognise the recipients cells as foreign and attack them.

Bluebird's treatment works by extracting patients' stem cells and modifying them with Lenti-D. They are then infused back into the patient, where they thenhave the potential to develop into multiple cell types that can produce a functional version of the ALD protein that is lacking in CALD.

Of the patient population involved in the study, as of 25 April 2019, 15 had completed the trial and are enrolled in a long-term follow-up study, 14 are currently still on-study, and three are no longer on-study.

The primary efficacy endpoint of the study is the number of patients who are alive and free of MFDs at month 24 MFDS are the six severe disabilities commonly attributed to CALD, which have the most severe effect on a patients ability to function independently.

The study demonstrated that of those patients who have or would reach 24 months of followup and complete the study, 88% continue to be MFD-free and alive. The 14 patients currently on study have less than 24 months of follow-up and have so far shown no evidence of MFDs.

Out of the 32 treated patients, three did not or will not meet the primary efficacy endpoint, two patients withdrew from the study and one experienced rapid disease progression early, which lead to MFDs and death.

The primary safety endpoint the number of patients experiencing GvHD by month 24 was also met. According to Bluebird, no events of acute or chronic GvHD were reported posttreatment and there were no reports of graft failure, cases of insertional oncogenesis or replication competent lentivirus. There were three adverse events potentially related to treatment of Lenti-D, but these resolved using standard measures.

Lenti-D is Bluebirds lead gene therapy programme,but the company has also made significant progress with its Celgene-partnered CAR-T cancer immunotherapy programme, reporting dramatic responses with its multiple myeloma candidatebb2121 last December.

It also received approval for its gene therapy Zynteglo earlier this year. The one-time gene therapy has been approved for patients 12 years and older with transfusion-dependent -thalassaemia (TDT), and has been shown in a series of small studies to free a majority of patients from the need to have regular blood transfusions.

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Bluebird bio reveals further encouraging data for CALD gene therapy - PMLiVE

Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital and John Theurer Cancer Center Launch Clinical Trial Evaluating Gene Therapy for Severe Sickle Cell Disease in…

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Newswise The Childrens Cancer Institute at the Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital at Hackensack Meridian Health Hackensack University Medical Center and the John Theurer Cancer Center have announced they are participating in a multicenter Phase I/II clinical trial of an investigational gene therapy from bluebird bio, Inc. This trial is specifically for adolescents and adults with severe sickle cell disease (SCD) who cannot be effectively treated using standard therapies such as antibiotics, vitamins, blood transfusions or any pain relieving medications. The study is evaluating the safety and effectiveness of LentiGlobin for sickle cell disease, a gene therapy produced using the patients own modified stem cells to treat their sickle cell disease.

By using the patients own cells to produce functional hemoglobin that can prevent sickling of their red blood cells, LentiGlobin for SCD offers patients the opportunity to treat their disease without the need to have a matched bone marrow donor. The John Theurer Cancer Center is one of a limited number of centers internationally, and the Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital is the only pediatric site in New Jersey, where the study, which is enrolling patients age 12-50, is taking place.

Sickle cell affects 100,000 Americans. It affects one in every 365 African American births and one in every 16,000 Hispanic American births, said Alfred P. Gillio, M.D., director, Childrens Cancer Institute and section chief, Pediatric Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy Program, Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital at Hackensack University Medical Center. This trial is for patients who have severe sickle cell disease and seek advanced treatment options but do not have a well-matched stem cell donor. Only 15% of sickle cell patients have a matched sibling donor and only 25 percent of patients have a matched unrelated volunteer donor.

Sickle cell affects every organ in a patients body, said Stacey Rifkin-Zenenberg, D.O., FAAP, pediatric hematologist/oncologist, Childrens Cancer Institute, and section chief, Pain and Palliative Care, Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital at Hackensack University Medical Center. This disease really has a tremendous effect not only on the patient, but also the family.

Sickle cell disease is an inherited disease caused by a mutation in the beta-globin gene, resulting in abnormal hemoglobin and sickle-shaped red blood cells. Symptoms and complications of the disease include anemia, infections, stroke, poor quality of life and early death. To date, the only cure for sickle cell disease is receiving a stem cell transplant from a matched donor, but this is not a therapeutic option for many patients. Supportive care including hydroxyurea and blood transfusions can ameliorate symptoms of the disease. To date, without a marrow donor, there has been no alternate curative therapy. Life expectancy of a person with sickle cell disease is 20 to 40 years of age. In some cases, patients using disease modifying medications can live to 50 or 60.

This therapy may be a major advance for sickle cell patients and so far, the results look very promising, said Scott D. Rowley, M.D., FACP, hematologist, medical director, Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy and medical director, BMT Cell Lab, John Theurer Cancer Center, Hackensack Meridian Health Hackensack University Medical Center, who is enrolling adult patients. This investigational treatment, which is a one-time therapy, may be an option for our patients who have no other treatment options.

The results from early clinical studies are encouraging, said Dr. Gillio. With this treatment, the patient is their own donor and we are modifying their own cells to add copies of a functional beta globin gene.

In the current study:

About Hackensack Meridian Health Hackensack University Medical Center

Hackensack Meridian Health Hackensack University Medical Center, a 781-bed nonprofit teaching and research hospital located in Bergen County, NJ, is the largest provider of inpatient and outpatient services in the state. Founded in 1888 as the countys first hospital, it is now part of the largest, most comprehensive and truly integrated health care network in New Jersey, offering a complete range of medical services, innovative research and life-enhancing care, which is comprised of 34,100 team members and more than 6,500 physicians. Hackensack University Medical Center is ranked #2 in New Jersey and #59 in the country in U.S. News & World Reports 2019-20 Best Hospital rankings and is ranked high-performing in the U.S. in colon cancer surgery,lung cancersurgery,COPD, heart failure, heart bypass surgery, aortic valve surgery,abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, knee replacement and hip replacement. Out of 4,500 hospitals evaluated, Hackensack is one of only 57 that received a top rating in all nine procedures and conditions. Hackensack University Medical Center is one of only five major academic medical centers in the nation to receive Healthgrades Americas 50 Best Hospitals Award for five or more years in a row. Beckers Hospital Review recognized Hackensack University Medical Center as one of the 100 Great Hospitals in America 2018. The medical center is one of the top 25 green hospitals in the country according to Practice Greenhealth, and received 26 Gold Seals of Approval by The Joint Commission more than any other hospital in the country. It was the first hospital in New Jersey and second in the nation to become a Magnet recognized hospital for nursing excellence; receiving its sixth consecutive designation in 2019. Hackensack University Medical Center has created an entire campus of award-winning care, including: John Theurer Cancer Center, a consortium member of the NCI-designated Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center; the Heart & Vascular Hospital; and the Sarkis and Siran Gabrellian Womens and Childrens Pavilion, which houses the Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital and Donna A. Sanzari Womens Hospital, which was designed with The Deirdre Imus Environmental Health Center and listed on the Green Guides list of Top 10 Green Hospitals in the U.S. Hackensack University Medical Center is the Hometown Hospital of the New York Giants and the New York Red Bulls and is Official Medical Services Provider to THE NORTHERN TRUST PGA Golf Tournament. It remains committed to its community through fundraising and community events especially the Tackle Kids Cancer Campaign providing much needed research at the Childrens Cancer Institute housed at the Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital. To learn more, visit http://www.HackensackUMC.org.

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Joseph M. Sanzari Childrens Hospital and John Theurer Cancer Center Launch Clinical Trial Evaluating Gene Therapy for Severe Sickle Cell Disease in...

Personalised medicine: developing gene therapies – AOP

Tara Moore, a professor of personalised medicine at Ulster University, is working on a project that aims to develop a gene therapy treatment for corneal dystrophy.

The research, which Professor Moore discussed at a Four Liveries guest lecture for the Worshipful Company of Spectacle Makers at Painters Hall in London last week (12 September), is a collaboration between the Ulster University and Avellino Labs in the US.

Speaking to OT, Professor Moore explained: It is a new era of medicine where its much more personalised. Its not one-drug-fits-all or one therapy fits everyone. Its much more personalised to the person and to the exact reason that they have the disease they have.

The exact genetic mistake or mutation that causes [a persons] particular disease can be targeted now very specifically. We are now equipped with a way to target that DNA that we never thought would be possible, Professor Moore said.

Professor Moore and her team are applying CRISPR technologies to the eyes, specifically the front of the eye she explained. It is difficult to deliver to. But if we can overcome that battle, we can hopefully have a gene therapy that will be successful, she shared.

When discussing the future for the treatment, Professor Moore told OT: I would like to think we would end up at a stage in personalised medicine where everyone would be pre-screened for whatever mutations that they contain that predispose them to a particular disease and we could treat people.

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A Child’s Shattered Chromosomes Illustrate the Value of Supportive Therapies | DNA Science Blog – PLoS Blogs

To a trained eye, the chromosome chart (karyotype) above has 4 irregularities, circled in red. Theyre chromosome pairs of uneven size.

The chromosomes represent genetic material missing or extra, but also a beautiful girl. Her father contacted me after he read my recent post about a friends child with a rare mutation in a single gene, a more typical driver of so-called diagnostic odysseys. Did I have any insight on treatments for his daughter? Hed send her lab reports.

The notations were in Hebrew, but the universal language of chromosome charts spoke clearly to me. The chromosome pairs are size-ordered, its members matching, but pairs 9, 14, 15, and 16 look like tall and short dance partners. This was something more profound than a single gene glitch, or even a missing or extra chromosome.

Shattered and Scattered

Aviya has an exceedingly rare condition called chromothripsis, which is Greek for shattered colored bodies. Breaks that sever both strands of the DNA double helix riddle one or more chromosomes. Lost pieces may have been ejected and glommed onto other chromosomes at or before fertilization, creating the karyotype that veers from the neat, normal, 23-pair organization.

Chromothripsis is best studied in cancer cells, where the genome is shot to smithereens, but only a few dozen people in the world are known to have it in all their cells. When the medical team at Schneider Childrens Medical Center in Israel discovered the childs condition, they told the parents that only 30 cases had been reported in the medical literature. Ever.

For some of the cases, researchers deduced how chromosomes broke long ago, in developing eggs. Since human eggs sit in an ovary for dozens of years before they mature at the moment of fertilization, enough time elapsed for natural DNA repair to fix some of the breaks and fill in small deletions.

In the few cases of fetuses surviving chromothripsis, enough of the genome must have been knit back together, even if in the wrong places, to sustain development and life. Sperm mature much too quickly, over a few months, to heal themselves in this way.

So a person with chromothripsis is about as rare as rare can be. Each case is unique, for the genomes of no two people that come apart in this highly unusual manner are stitched back together in exactly the same way.

The Diagnostic Odyssey

Aviya is now just past her second birthday and is beginning to walk, although she doesnt yet talk. Her symptoms unfolded early and rapidly, about 3 months after her birth in May 2017.

She started throwing up multiple times a day and regardless of how much or what she ate, breast milk or formula, she would not gain weight. She wasnt reaching developmental milestones. The physical therapist noted her hypotonia (low muscle tone, or floppiness), her dad recalled. Her weight steadily dropped, as the vomiting worsened.

Hospital stays followed. Tests and scans ruled out intestinal malrotation, while neurological tests and abdominal ultrasounds were normal too. Doctors inserted a nasogastric tube, for nutrition.

At 7 months old, Aviya started at the failure-to-thrive clinic at Schneiders, where she had tests and evaluations for physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT). She also met with an eating specialist.

Everyone poked and prodded and measured and checked. She had blood tests, gave stool samples, had CT scans, MRI images, and drank stuff for x-rays through the GI tract, Yosef said. The doctors initially suspected malrotation of the intestines behind the vomiting, but that didnt hold up. They didnt find any evidence or suspicion of anything amiss based on symptoms only, he added. Heart, brain, blood, all looked ok.

The next step: probing genetics. A chromosomal microarray test (CMA; for small deletions and insertions) and a karyotype revealed the four unusual chromosomes, deemed a complex chromosomal rearrangement. Tests for selected single-gene conditions, like Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, were negative.

Further analysis led to the chromothripsis explanation. Because the parents CMA tests and karyotypes were normal, their daughter hadnt inherited her unusual chromosomes they originated in her, likely an ultra rare event in a lone developing egg, followed by spectacular natural healing.

But deducing chromosomal origins and even contemplating whether a gene therapy might be possible for a situation so complex took a backseat to addressing Aviyas daily challenges. First, she had to be able to eat.

Focusing on Symptoms

Vomiting send Aviya to the hospital regularly. For 9 months she received supplemental feedings through a nasogastric tube, and the frequency of episodes slowed as she slowly gained weight. When the gaining once again slowed, and days-long bouts of vomiting led to more hospitalizations, doctors performed a procedure called PEG (for percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy). A tube through the abdominal wall into her stomach now delivered nutrients. That was done on March 5th, 2019.

The vomiting finally ceased and Aviya has reached the 10th percentile in body weight, up from inexorably losing. Shes also catching up on gross motor skills and reaching developmental milestones. And shes intelligent. She understands basically everything you tell her, for the level of a 2-year-old, Yosef said. Thats pretty amazing considering the number of unusual chromosomes and how many genes affect brain function.

But boosting nutrition isnt the only intervention helping Aviya to overcome whatever limits her chromosomes have set. Yosef credits her overall improvement to the excellent care shes been receiving at a special education day care program near their home on the West Bank. Shes been attending since November, and she gets PT, OT, speech therapy, and does specialized exercises tailored to her abilities. Aviya also returns to the failure-to-thrive clinic every other month, down from once a week.

Instead of Fixing Genes, Address Symptoms

When parents become sucked down the rabbit hole of rare diseases, they quickly learn about biotech approaches: enzyme therapies, stem cells, antisense oligonucleotides, gene therapy, and even gene editing. Its overwhelming. Some of the parents DNA Science has featured rapidly became nearly as expert as some of the scientists developing new treatments (see Celebrating the Moms of Gene Therapy).

Would exome sequencing shed any more light on the situation, or it would just lead to more questions that no one has the answers to? Yosef asked me. Exome sequencing, which reveals the information in the part of the genome that encodes protein, might actually provide too much information, noting too many missing genes to consider treatments for all of them. But it might reveal which proteins Aviya cant make, and maybe that could lead to something.

The TMI issue also affects the utility of a gene therapy for chromothripsis: too many targets.

Specific mutations in single genes cause the conditions for which gene therapy has been FDA approved Luxturnato treat a form of inherited blindnessand Zolgensmato treat spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). The cost of gene therapy for now is prohibitive, although the manufacturers help with patient access. Zolgensma recently made headlines for its $2.1 million price tagand Luxturna for both eyes is about $850,000. The gene therapies, though, are intended to be one-and-done, or at least just in need of a booster. And the alternatives, in these two frontrunners, are blindness or death.

Given the cost of gene therapy and its restriction to genetic disruptions far simpler than the chaos of Aviyas chromosomes, its great that standard therapies are having an effect.

Shes been improving by leaps and bounds in everything, from how much she eats to what shes willing to try to her understanding of everything. Shes just so much better, since the PEG and beginning the special ed day care. She eats more, theres more variety to her food choices, and shes willing to try anything, Yosef said.

He knows that no research team or company is going to pursue a treatment for a sample size of one. What were doing is the best we can do. Its working, so if it aint broke dont fix it. If we find something else to do, then for sure well do it, but in the meantime, were doing the best that we figured out for now. Well see what the future holds.

So Ill end with a shout-out to the supportive therapies that help so many. Even after a sophisticated gene therapy that takes years, if not decades, to take to a clinical trial, supportive therapies are critical to maximizing any effect, on a daily basis. Perhaps no one knows that better than Lori Sames, whose daughter Hannah had gene therapy for giant axonal neuropathy in 2016. (See After Gene Therapy: Hannahs Journey Continues).

PT is incredibly important! When Hannah was a toddler and developed low muscle tone, our first sign something was wrong prior to her diagnosis, her first physical therapist emphasized how important it was to let her do everything. Do not pick her up and put her in her car seat. Open the door of the minivan and let her crawl in and hoist herself up into the car seat. Let her walk. If shes tired and asks to be carried for a bit, carry her for a bit. Keep her as active as you can for as long as you can.

Hannahs PT continues today. While standing, she does squats, leaning back as if shes sitting but powering back through to a stand before she touches the seat. Were trying to keep her hips and quads and hamstrings strong. We have her stand twice an hour and shes in the EasyStand device at least an hour a day. This is critically important for her internal organs and bone density, Lori recently told me.

Aviya is a wonderful, spirited child.

Shes a fun-loving, constantly happy kid, even though she has spent more time in the hospital then most people I know. Even while she was hospitalized she would always smile at the doctors and nurses and play with the other kids, with as much energy as she had. She loves taking things out of and putting them into bags or boxes. She loves hugging dolls and pretending to feed them. She loves playing outside with plants and watching ants going back and forth. She loves to be part of everything and to crawl around the house, and loves when people talk or sing to her and she talks and sings back, said her father.

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A Child's Shattered Chromosomes Illustrate the Value of Supportive Therapies | DNA Science Blog - PLoS Blogs

Novartis says Pharmalittle: Pelosi unveils aggressive drug pricing plan – STAT

Good morning, everyone, and how are you today? We are doing just fine, thank you, courtesy of a warm and shiny sun and a delicious cool breeze wafting across the Pharmalot campus. Moreover, a soothing quietude has descended upon us now that our short person has left for the local schoolhouse and our official mascot has taken up his snoozing position in a faraway corner. As for us, yes, we are brewing our ritual cups of stimulation we favor hot-buttered rum today, for those keeping track. Meanwhile, here is the latest menu of interesting items for you. Hope you have a wonderful day and do keep in touch.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Thursday formally unveiled her long-awaited plan to lower drug prices, giving Democrats an aggressive counter to the White Houses numerous and widely covered efforts to lower drug prices, STAT reports. The plan would enact an international price index, capping U.S. drug payments for Medicare at an average of foreign prices, and require the federal government to negotiate the cost of 250 prescription medicines, using the international price as a maximum price, and extend the negotiated price to insurers and the commercial market at large. The bill would also cap senior out-of-pocket drug expenses at $2,000 annually.

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Novartis says Pharmalittle: Pelosi unveils aggressive drug pricing plan - STAT

TrakCel partners with McKesson – BioPharma-Reporter.com

The collaboration agreed between the supply chain management services providers, McKesson and TrakCel, comes after the companies have jointly taken on the market entrance of a T-cell based allogeneic therapeutic product of an undisclosed late-stage biopharmaceutical developer.

The commercial launch of this product, which will be the first off-the-shelf product available, is expected in the fourth quarter of 2020, Akshay Peer, VP of sales and account management at TrakCel, told us.

Under the partnership and in order to serve this commercialization, as well as other future product launches, the two companies will develop a combined program, utilizing McKessons patient services alongside TrakCels data management software platform.

The special supply chain requirements of personalized treatments, such as cell and gene therapies, are due to the developers need to manage multiple players and organizations concurrently, according to Peer.

This includes different teams within site of care, shipping and logistics, manufacturing and storage, Peer added.

More specifically, according to TrakCels VP, the product journey consists of the below stations:

Layne Martin, VP of specialty distribution solutions at McKesson Life Sciences, commented that, as the wave of over 900 cell and gene products currently under review by the FDA come to market, supply chain service providers can begin to offer some standards to improve outcomes.

As the products evolve to the latest stages of development,a number of processes including patient scheduling and care have to be mapped, said Peer, adding that the case management teams that are in-charge of communicating with the patient and healthcare professionals need a dashboard view of the entire lifecycle development of the therapy.

According to the companies, the integrated platform is expected to enable the scale-up of products towards market delivery, for the increasing number of developers approaching the commercial launch of cell and gene therapies.

The platform will include automatic scheduling of product-specific workflows across multiple supply chain partners and care team members, and validated chain-of-identity tracking to guarantee correct drug product delivery.These capabilities ensure that the patient receives the correct, uncompromised treatment at the right time, McKesson stated.

Therefore, the integrated suite which will result from the collaboration is expected to provide a control tower view of the product distribution.

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TrakCel partners with McKesson - BioPharma-Reporter.com

CMTA Grants $335,000 to Projects that Advance Therapy Development – Charcot-Marie-Tooth News

The CharcotMarieTooth Association (CMTA) has granted $335,000 to two research projects focused on the development of new therapies for CharcotMarieTooth (CMT) disease type 1A, type 1B, and other demyelinating forms of CMT, including type 4.

CMTA has been funding projects for 30 years on research focused on discovering the mechanisms involved in CMT and on developing safe and effective therapies for the 2.8 million living with CMT worldwide.

The association launched its Strategy to Accelerate Research (STAR) initiative in 2008 to bring together scientists, pharmaceutical companies, and patients to create a multidisciplinary collaborative environment that would advance scientific and medical innovation in CMT.

CMTAsSTAR Advisory Board includes 30 leading scientists and clinicians who are responsible for analyzing the quality of ongoing projects and deciding which ones receive monetary support.

A grant totaling $154,000 was awarded to a collaboration project between three leading CMT experts Kleopas Kleopa, MD, PhD, from The Cyprus Institute of Neurology & Genetics; John Svaren, PhD, from the Waisman Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; and Steven Gray, PhD, from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.

Their project will focus on the development of two different types of gene therapies. One therapy is designed to shut down the PMP22 gene, which is overactive in people with CMT1A. The second treatment candidate is designed to replace the defective genes responsible for the different forms of CMT4 and CMT1X.

The scientists will attempt to come up with safe viral vectors to deliver the modified versions of these genes to Schwann cells specialized cells that produce the fatty substance (myelin) protecting nerve cells which are defective in CMT.

The team is planning to test the efficacy of four different types of adeno-associated viruses (AAVs), developed by Gray, to determine the one that could better deliver the modified genes to Schwann cells in cases of CMT1A and CMT1X. The researchers will also test the efficacy of two AAVs in a mouse model of CMT1A.

The proposed experiments will seek to enable a translatable gene therapy approach for CMT1A, CMT1X, and various CMT4 forms. This will also be the first testing of AAV9 virus distribution to Schwann cells in a larger animal model (primate), the researchers said in their project proposal.

The second grant, which totaled $180,000, was awarded to a collaboration project between Maurizio DAntonio, PhD, from the IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele and Ghjuvan Shackleford, PhD, from the Hunter James Kelly Research Institute.

Their project will focus on investigating the mechanisms of disease in a mouse model of late-onset CMT1B (named P0T124M) and discovering new therapeutic strategies to prevent the degeneration of nerve cells and their extensions (required for the proper transmission of nervous signals).

This project will identify signals and molecules that underlie glial support of axons, and could reveal new unifying therapeutic targets that are common to a large spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases, the researchers stated.

Joana is currently completing her PhD in Biomedicine and Clinical Research at Universidade de Lisboa. She also holds a BSc in Biology and an MSc in Evolutionary and Developmental Biology from Universidade de Lisboa. Her work has been focused on the impact of non-canonical Wnt signaling in the collective behavior of endothelial cells cells that make up the lining of blood vessels found in the umbilical cord of newborns.

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CMTA Grants $335,000 to Projects that Advance Therapy Development - Charcot-Marie-Tooth News

First patient dosed in Fabry Disease gene therapy trial – PharmaTimes

Freeline has announced the dosing of the first patient in its MARVEL1 study, a multi-centre Phase I/II clinical trial of its liver-directed AAV gene therapy for Fabry Disease.

The study, which is the first clinical-stage adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy study globally for Fabry Disease, leverages Freelines proprietary gene therapy platform, including its novel capsid, which has already shown clinical benefit for Haemophilia B patients.

The study aimed to deliver a replacement copy of the missing gene to the liver, which will then produce continuous high levels of GLA, offering the potential for therapy with a single treatment.

The initiation of the MARVEL1 study and dosing of the first patient is a significant milestone for Freeline, said Chris Hollowood, executive chairman of Freeline.

Continuous high expression of alpha GLA holds the potential for better treatment outcomes than is seen with ERT, the current standard of care. We believe we can access high expression at relatively low doses. With two programmes in the clinic on a common proprietary gene therapy platform, Freeline are building a leading systemic gene therapy company using next-generation AAV technology. These innovative gene therapies have the potential to change patients lives.

Fabry disease is a type of lysosomal storage disorder in which certain fatty molecules are not properly metabolised. Patients have a genetic mutation which leads to a deficiency of -galactosidase A enzyme (GLA) resulting in an accumulation of lipids, such as globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) and globotriaosylsphingosine (LysoGb3), throughout the body. This can cause highly debilitating progressive multi-organ disease.

It is estimated that Fabry Disease affects one in every 40,000 people. It is currently treated by enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), which requires regular and expensive infusions.

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First patient dosed in Fabry Disease gene therapy trial - PharmaTimes

PPMD Awards University of Florida $1 Million for Novel Gene Therapy Approach Targeting the Heart – PRNewswire

HACKENSACK, N.J., Sept. 17, 2019 /PRNewswire/ --Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD), a nonprofit organization leading the fight to end Duchenne muscular dystrophy (Duchenne), announced plans to award H. Lee Sweeney, PhD, and his team at the University of Florida (Gainesville) $1 million to continue their exploration of developing novel therapies that can address the causes of dilated heart failure in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy. This $1 million investment is part of PPMD's Cardiac Initiative and a direct result of the Duchenne community's generosity during the organization's 2018 end of the year campaign, as well as the support of other Duchenne families and foundations, including the Killian Family, Team Joseph, Kindness Over Muscular Dystrophy, Another Day for Gray Foundation, and Small Heroes Foundation.

Duchenne isthe most common fatal genetic disorder diagnosed in childhood, affecting approximately one in 5,000 live male births. Duchenne is caused by a change in the dystrophin gene. For people with Duchenne, cardiac disease is an area of great concern. The absence of dystrophin in the heart contributes to a progressive deterioration of cardiac muscle and eventual dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) or heart disease.

Gene therapy, utilizing AAV vector as the delivery vehicle, provides a potential strategy to deliver transgenes targeting the mechanisms underlying the development of dilated cardiomyopathy. This funding supports the development of a heart specific therapy using an AAV vector containing two transgenes to restore calcium handling and prevent mitochondrial dysfunction. This therapy will potentially be able to treat the hearts of people living with Duchenne and Becker, in a way that is independent of, or complementary to, micro-dystrophin based gene therapy.

PPMD's Founding President and CEO, Pat Furlong, lost both of her sons to heart failure resulting from Duchenne, so this project is particularly meaningful to her and her family: "Heart issues don't just affect some people with Duchenne; they affect ALL people with Duchenne. And while we have improved cardiac care in Duchenne, we still need treatments that repair our children's hearts. Since our organization began 25 years ago, we have been asking questions and trying to better understand the effect of this disease on the heart. Chris and Patrick died of heart failure, so the heart is at the center of Duchenne for me. That's why I am extremely proud to announce this $1 million investment into a gene therapy with the potential to heal the hearts of our loved ones. I am grateful to Dr. Sweeney and the amazing team at University of Florida, as well as the families in our community who believe in our mission and gave generously to help fund the fight to end Duchenne."

Dr. Sweeney, who has a long history in Duchenne research and has worked with PPMD for over two decades, says that PPMD's funding comes at a critical moment in the development of gene therapy: "These are exciting times for gene therapies especially for gene therapies for Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy. However, while the current therapies may potentially help the skeletal muscles of patients, there is more to learn and to develop before we can be confident that we are doing all we can for the hearts of patients. The funds provided by PPMD will allow us to move faster toward the goal of creating the best possible gene therapy for the hearts of people with Duchenne and Becker."

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is the most common type of human cardiomyopathy, occurring mostly in adults 20 to 60. It affects the heart's ventricles and atria, the lower and upper chambers of the heart, respectively. Most forms of DCM are acquired forms from a number of causes that include coronary heart disease, heart attack, high blood pressure, diabetes, thyroid disease, viral hepatitis, and viral infections that inflame the heart muscle. In the case of certain forms of Becker, as well as in most cases of Duchenne, cardiomyopathy can ultimately limit the patient's survival.

While cardiomyopathy associated with Duchenne is technically a dilated cardiomyopathy that progresses to heart failure, many clinicians don't consider it a typical DCM because the patients' hearts don't tend to dilate until rather late in the disease progression. However, this is likely due to the fact that the hearts are not significantly burdened because of the patients' skeletal muscle disease and lack of ability to exercise.

Although Duchenne hearts do not dilate until late in disease progression, they get progressively stiff at earlier time points. This is clearly due to progressive fibrosis, and is slowed by the use of anti-fibrotic drugs, such as ACE inhibitors or ARBs (Angiotensin II Receptor Blockers). Interestingly, because of the fibrosis and lack of burden on the heart, the left ventricular chamber is actually smaller in diameter than normal after age 8 and until late in disease progression, when it begins to dilate. Again, consistent with this being related to the fibrosis is the fact the individuals who were not given ACE inhibitors early in disease progression show the smallest ventricular diameters and progress the fastest once they begin to dilate.

In the case of Becker, there clearly is a subset of Becker patients that show a disproportionately rapid progression of their cardiac disease as compared to their skeletal muscle disease. This has called attention to the fact that there are some regions of the dystrophin molecule that are more important in the heart than they are in skeletal muscle, likely because of components that differ in importance or even in identity between the heart and skeletal muscle.further explore a novel gene therapy approach that will target the heart in people living with Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy.

To learn more about PPMD's Cardiac Initiative, click here.

About Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy

Duchenneis a fatal genetic disorder that slowly robs people of their muscle strength. Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy (PPMD) is the largest most comprehensive nonprofit organization in the United States focused on finding a cure for Duchenneour mission is to end Duchenne.

We demand optimal care standards and strive to ensure every family has access to expert healthcare providers, cutting edge treatments, and a community of support. We invest deeply in treatments for this generation of Duchenne patients and in research that will benefit future generations. Our advocacy efforts have secured hundreds of millions of dollars in funding and won two FDA approvals.

Everything we doand everything we have done since our founding in 1994helps those with Duchenne live longer, stronger lives. We will not rest until we end Duchenne for every single person affected by the disease. Join our fight against Duchenne at EndDuchenne.org and follow PPMD on Facebook, Twitter, andYouTube.

SOURCE Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy

Join the fight. End Duchenne.

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PPMD Awards University of Florida $1 Million for Novel Gene Therapy Approach Targeting the Heart - PRNewswire

Early snapshot of Adverum’s eye gene therapy sparks concern about vision loss – Endpoints News

An early-stage update on Adverum Biotechnologies intravitreal gene therapy has triggered investor concern, after patients with wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) saw their vision deteriorate, despite signs that the treatment is improving retinal anatomy.

Adverum, on Wednesday, unveiled 24-week data from the OPTIC trial of its experimental therapy, ADVM-022, in six patients who have been administered with one dose of the therapy. On average, patients in the trial had severe disease with an average of 6.2 anti-VEGF injections in the eight months prior to screening and an average annualized injection frequency of 9.3 injections.

Over the six month period, patients did not require any anti-VEGF rescue injections and five of six patients saw a complete response with a total resolution of fluid following the Adverum injection. There were no serious adverse events, and the majority of side-effects were mild.

However, patients lost visual acuity by two letters on average, with a 90% confidence interval of -9.1 letters to +5.1 letters.

The range of individual patient data were not presented, though the wide confidence interval suggests that some patients may have experienced a loss of more than 10 letters during the course of the trial lack of rescue injections is difficult to square with declining vision. SVB Leerinks Mani Foroohar wrote in a note.

However, the study investigator insisted no loss in vision was due to wet AMD pathology and observed loss of visual acuity is due to normal variabilityin a small set of patients an assertion that, if proved out with additional follow-up, would very substantially improve the implied quality of this dataset.

Shares of the company which spectacularly failed years ago when it was christened Avalanche Biotechnologies $ADVM were down about 6.8% to $5.56 in Friday premarket trading. The stock sank on Thursday, evaporating millions from its market value.

This data suggest ADVM-022 is potentially active in delivering an expressible gene cassette in wet AMD, but mixed signals in this small dataset should lift some of the competitive overhang on RGNX shares, Foroohar added. RegenexBio experimental gene therapy for wet AMD, RGX-314, is currently in a Phase I/II trial.

Wet AMD, which is characterized by blurred vision or a blind spot in an individuals visual field, is typically caused by abnormal growth of blood vessels that leak fluid or blood into the macula. Macular degeneration is the leading cause of severe, irreversible vision loss in the elderly. Anti-VEGF injections such as Regenerons $REGN flagship Eylea, as well as Roches $RHBBY Lucentis and Avastin, are commonly used to treat wet AMD.

In April, the FDA imposed a clinical hold on an application to test ADVM-022 in humans, asking for additional data on Adverums chemistry, manufacturing and control process. In May, the hold was lifted. Late last year, the biotech abandoned its then lead experimental drug, ADVM-043, for the treatment of A1AT deficiency.

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Early snapshot of Adverum's eye gene therapy sparks concern about vision loss - Endpoints News

Type 2 Gaucher Trial of Gene Therapy PR001 May Open with Higher Dose – Gaucher Disease News

Prevail Therapeuticsis asking the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to approved a request to open clinical trials, at higher doses than initially planned, into its investigational gene therapy PR001 in people with pediatric neuropathic Gauchers disease (type 2).

In its updated Investigational New Drug (IND) application, Prevail modified the original design of its clinical trial to allow for a higher starting dose of the therapy. This decision was based on conversations with the FDA and preclinical data supporting PR001 as a more effective and still safe treatment at higher doses, it announced in a press release.

The company is waiting on an FDA decision, and expects to start recruiting patients for a Phase 1/2 trial testing PR001 in children with neuropathic Gaucher in the first half of 2020. The IND, an essential step to opening a clinical study, was first filed in June.

We are dedicated to developing PR001 for pediatric nGD[neuropathic Gaucher disease], the most progressive form of Gaucher disease, which involves neurological manifestations that cause severe morbidity and mortality. We believe PR001 has tremendous potential to slow or stop disease progression in patients who currently have no disease-modifying therapeutic options, Asa Abeliovich, MD, PhD, founder, and CEO of Prevail, said in the release.

Gaucher disease is a hereditary condition caused by mutations in the GBA gene, which leads to the production of defective beta-glucocerebrosidase. This protein breaks down fatty molecules that are toxic if they accumulate inside the cells, leading to the array of symptomsassociated with Gauchers disease.

Toxic fatty molecules building in the brain lead to manifestations of neuropathic Gauchers, which can be observed from early infancy in type 2 disease.

PR001 uses a modified, harmless version of an adeno-associated virus (AAV9) to deliver a fullyworking copy of the GBA1 gene to nerve cells. This allows these cells to initiate processes that lead to the production of functional beta-glucocerebrosidase, which could ease the symptoms of neurotropic Gauchers disease. A single dose of PR001 has the potential to modify the disease with long-lasting effect.

Studies in mice and primatesfound that PR001 was well-tolerated and led to the expression of a functional protein in nerve cells, reducing the accumulation of fatty molecules and consequent symptoms.

AAV9 has been widely used to deliver gene therapies both in practice and in clinical trials. A transport vehicle for the corrected gene, it is engineered to be a harmless virus and can cross the blood-brain barrier, allowing it to reach nerve cells.

PR001 is also being developed and tested as a treatment of people with Parkinsons diseasewho have mutations in the GBA gene. Prevail has an open IND applicationfor trials here, and the therapy received fast-track designation by the FDA as a possible Parkinsons treatment.

Alejandra has a PhD in Genetics from So Paulo State University (UNESP) and is currently working as a scientific writer, editor, and translator. As a writer for BioNews, she is fulfilling her passion for making scientific data easily available and understandable to the general public. Aside from her work with BioNews, she also works as a language editor for non-English speaking authors and is an author of science books for kids.

Total Posts: 20

Ins Martins holds a BSc in Cell and Molecular Biology from Universidade Nova de Lisboa and is currently finishing her PhD in Biomedical Sciences at Universidade de Lisboa. Her work has been focused on blood vessels and their role in both hematopoiesis and cancer development.

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Type 2 Gaucher Trial of Gene Therapy PR001 May Open with Higher Dose - Gaucher Disease News

Therapy creates new neurons for faster stroke recovery – Futurity: Research News

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A new gene therapy turns glial cellsabundant support cells in the braininto neurons, repairing damage that results from stroke and significantly improving motor function in mice.

Once researchers further develop the NeuroD1-based gene therapy, it could potentially help to treat stroke, which is a leading cause of disability in the US, with 800,000 new stroke patients every year.

The current treatment for stroke has a narrow time window, typically within a few hours after the occurrence of stroke, says lead author Yuchen Chen, a postdoctoral fellow at Penn State. Many patients cannot receive the treatment in time and as a result, often suffer from permanent disability caused by irreversible neuronal loss. There is an urgent need to develop a new therapy to regenerate new neurons and restore lost brain functions among stroke patients.

The human brain has approximately 86 billion neurons. While mini-strokes can be tolerated, moderate stroke involving the loss of billions of neurons leaves detrimental effects that do not spontaneously recover.

So, the critical question that is still unanswered in the neuroregeneration field is how can we regenerate billions of new neurons in a patients brain after stroke? says Gong Chen, professor of biology and chair in life sciences. The biggest obstacle for brain repair is that neurons cannot regenerate themselves. Many clinical trials for stroke have failed over the past several decades, largely because none of them can regenerate enough new neurons to replenish the lost neurons.

The reserchers pioneered a new approach to regenerate functional neurons using glial cells, a group of cells surrounding every single neuron in the brain that provide essential support to neurons. Unlike neurons, glial cells can divide and regenerate themselves, especially after brain injury.

I believe that turning glial cells that are already present in the brain into new neurons is the best way to replenish the lost neurons, says Gong Chen. These glial cells are the neighbors of the dead neurons in the brain and are likely to share the same ancestral cellular lineage.

The team previously reported that a single genetic neural factor, NeuroD1, could directly convert glial cells into functional neurons inside mouse brains with Alzheimers disease, but the total number of neurons generated was limited. The research team believed that this limited regeneration was due to the retroviral system used to deliver NeuroD1 to the brain.

In the current study, the research team used the AAV viral system, which is now the first choice for gene therapy in the nervous system, to deliver NeuroD1 into mouse motor cortex that a stroke had damaged.

Many neurons die after stroke but surviving glial cells can proliferate and form a glial scar in the stroke areas. The researchers designed their AAV system to express NeuroD1 preferentially in the glial cells that form these scars, turning them directly into neuronal cells. Such direct glia-to-neuron conversion technology not only increased neuronal density in the stroke areas, but also significantly reduced brain tissue loss the stroke caused.

Interestingly, the newly converted neurons showed similar neuronal properties to the neurons that were lost after stroke. This suggests a potential impact of the local glial lineage on the converted neuronal identity.

The most exciting finding of this study is to see the newly converted neurons being fully functional in firing repetitive action potentials and forming synaptic networks with other preexisting neurons, says Gong Chen. They also send out long-range axonal projections to the right targets and facilitate motor functional recovery.

A separate collaborative work led by Gregory Quirk, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico, further tested the NeuroD1-based gene therapy in a rat stroke model. Quirk and colleagues also found that this direct glia-to-neuron conversion technology can rescue cognitive functional deficits stroke induces.

Because glial cells are everywhere in the brain and can divide to regenerate themselves, our study provides the proof-of-concept that glial cells in the brain can be tapped as a fountain of youth to regenerate functional new neurons for brain repair not only for stroke but also for many other neurological disorders that result in neuronal loss, says Yuchen Chen. Our next step is to further test this technology and ultimately to translate it into clinically effective therapies to benefit millions of patients worldwide.

A paper describing the new therapy appears in the journal Molecular Therapy.

Additional researchers at Penn State and the University of Puerto Rico contributed to the work. The US National Institutes of Health and the Penn State Charles H. Skip Smith Endowment Fund supported the research.

Source: Penn State

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Therapy creates new neurons for faster stroke recovery - Futurity: Research News

Bluebird gene therapy shows sustained benefit in CALD study – Seeking Alpha

Updated results from a Phase 2/3 clinical trial, Starbeam, evaluating bluebird bio's (BLUE -1.6%) gene therapy Lenti-D in patients with a rare severe inherited disorder called cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD) showed a sustained treatment effect. The data were presented at the European Pediatric Neurology Society Congress in Athens.

Treated patients remained free of major functional disabilities (MFDs) for as long as five years (and counting) with no reports of graft failure or treatment-related deaths. No new safety signals have been observed.

The study is assessing the safety and efficacy of autologous CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells transduced with Lenti-D lentiviral vector encoding human adrenoleukodystrophy protein. In other words, stem cells are extracted from the patient, modified with Lenti-D, then infused back into the patient after myeloablative conditioning (bone marrow activity is intentionally decreased to reduce the risk of complications).

88% (n=15/17) of treated patients who reached or would have reached 24 months' follow-up and completed the study are still alive and MFD-free.

Development is ongoing.

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Bluebird gene therapy shows sustained benefit in CALD study - Seeking Alpha

How Far to Hope: A Review of Oslo at TimeLine Theatre Company and Broadway In Chicago – Newcity Stage

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When the world is, as it is now, in a state of complete disarray and chaos, the impulse to say Dont worry, things will get better, can potentially come off as naive or privileged or foolish or just downright incorrect. Call it cynicism, call it rationalism, call it being just plain realistic. Seeking hope in a hopeless world just doesnt seem as possible these days.

Not impossible, mind you. Just less possible. Theres a difference.

Moving on, though: lets talk about historical fiction.

The creation and presentation of a work that reflects on a previous historical event has many intentional and unintentional purposes. It works as document of that event, especially if it is from a lesser-known historical perspective. It also works as a means of creating engagement with a history that otherwise might not have been: we are naturally drawn towards narrative and conflict. Finding a means to further inject these values into a piece of history only increases our engagement with the events.

But the unintendedor perhaps secretly intendedrepercussions of a historical drama can be to show how Not Good/Very Bad things used to be while highlighting Just How Far Weve Come since the event in question. Something like the movie Green Book comes to mind, a recent example of how 1960s racism was a Much Worse Racism and shouldnt we be happy that things are So Much Better Now? I mean, things are better now, right?

Oslo, J.T. Rogers Tony-Award winning play about the back-channel negotiations of the Oslo Accords in 1993, isnt that naive. It is true that, in recounting the gripping events of how Norwegian diplomats Mona Juul (a superb Bri Sudia) and Terje Rd-Larsen (a charming Scott Parkinson) brought together representatives from the Israeli Government and the Palestine Liberation Organization to begin peace discussions, you get the sense this is indeed going to be a play about a monumental event that shaped history and made everything Good, Again. But by the end of its almost three-hour running time, the play (and especially director Nick Bowlings production of it) is fully aware that, no, things are not So Much Better Now. There is still a major Israeli-Palestinian conflict. There are still governments acting maliciously and innocent people being murdered and a conflict between two peoples being weaponized by external forces for political gain. And there is seemingly no end in sight to it all.

Again, seemingly. Not impossible. Just less possible.

The play, produced by TimeLine Theatre Company and Broadway In Chicago, has been brought to Chicago in a practically seamless production, navigating a thirteen-actor ensemble through a cavalcade of scenes: mostly people talking in rooms or talking over the phone or talking outside in the snow. Theres a lot of talking. But the good kind! The kind that reminds you Yes, this is a play, and plays are about people talking, and the talking is engaging and good. Oslo navigates within the confines of what we have traditionally been told is a plays function to exceedingly excellent results. What it lacks in boundary-breaking format, it makes up for in detailed performances, sharp writing and expert craftsmanship.

Jeffrey Kmiecs barebones set combined with with Mike Tutajs subtle projections do a great job of transporting us to a myriad of locations. Christine Pascuals costumes are as dignified or as frumpy as the character wearing them warrants. Andre Pluess music is gripping and provides plenty of forward momentum. Jesse Klugs lights are specific and clear. Its a well-packaged clean production about an inherently messy topic. The dissonance is certainly not lost.

Oslo stands as a beacon of possibility in a world where that is not always a guarantee. Its final momentscemented by Sudias reticence to accept a happy endingmay just bring you close to tears. This desire for hope within hopelessness is just one piece of the puzzle of our world. To see Oslo is certainly not an invitation to start and finish ones engagement in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict then and there. Your work is never done, as well it shouldnt be. But it begs you to consider, in the smallest way, that peace is possible. That hope is possible.

We were not there in 1993. We are not there now.But the possibility. The possibility is there. Somewhere. Do you see it? (Ben Kaye)

TimeLine Theatre Company and Broadway In Chicago at Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place, 175 East Chestnut, broadwayinchicago.com, $35-$95. Through October 20.

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How Far to Hope: A Review of Oslo at TimeLine Theatre Company and Broadway In Chicago - Newcity Stage

Hitler the Progressive | Peter Hitchens – First Things

Has the mass murder of Europes Jews eclipsed the other significant horrors of Hitlers Germany? Does it matter? And is it possible to address this without being accused by the thought police of belittling the Holocaust? Let me try.

These questions are raised in the greatest film released in the past year, Never Look Away. Made by the aristocrat Florian von Donnersmarck, the director who created the masterpiece The Lives of Others, it has yet to attract the cult following rightly achieved by his first major work. I think it ought to.It is beautiful, immensely powerful, and packed with thoughts about goodness, the temptations of power and evil, and the nature of art.The films depictions of the morally complicated yet triumphant birth of a baby amid misery and ruin, and of the cynical use of abortion in a fathers evil attempt to end his daughters love affair, are firmly on the side of humanity, and should be treasured in their own right.

At the heart of the story is a Dickensian mystery of unrevealed guilt, quite unbelievable but based upon a true story. The original evil act destroys a beautiful young woman, suffering from some unknown mental illness, who is caught by Hitlers eugenics program. Even if you think you know about this sordid corner of National Socialism, which begins with steely pseudo-rationalism and ends in rank murder, the relatively gentle portrayal of this crime and the others happening alongside it will greatly shock and distress you.But it, and other elements of this film, ought also to waken the consciences of many on the self-described progressive left.

For these progressives, the Nazi era has been both a sort of moral scripture and a source of certainties.With increasing force since the 1970s, the left has managed to associate the Hitler period with the political and moral right. Here, they insist, is every aspect of conservatism in full power. Behold, they say, the evils which follow from conservative thought, from love of country and martial strength. See here how the ideas behind immigration controls or sexual conservatism also lead inescapably to the Yellow Star and the Pink Triangle, the death camp, the gas chamber, and the crematorium.

Above all, when it studies the mass murder of Europes Jews it can assert with relief that nothing of this kind stains our hygienic and enlightened society, which put an end to everything of this sort nearly eighty years ago. Indeed, we all can assert thiswhich is interesting given that many conservative European societies, whatever their faults, never engaged in racial mass murder and in many cases bravely resisted and frustrated it when it was imposed on them by occupying invaders.

This fact complicates the simple logic which has permitted so many liberals, for so long, to cry Fascist! at conservatives, and so silence and marginalize them. It might cause the more intelligent progressives to consider, with a little more care, what National Socialism actually was. If it was what they say it was, why was it so hostile to the Christian church, a body which modern liberals tend to see as a force for conservatism?And why did Nazis and Communists cooperate, most spectacularly in that great ignored spasm of cynicism, the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939the most astonishing political event of the twentieth century and the least known?

We are told that Stalin did it out of bitter necessity, to buy time, and that there was no true friendship or alliance in it.The awkward truth is that it was far warmer than that. There was a joint Nazi-Soviet victory parade in Brest Litovsk. Everyone in the pictures of this event looks happy (the unhappy people had already been shot or locked up). And the Soviet NKVD secret police, the essence of Communism, the sword and shield of the Communist Party,then staged a prisoner exchange with Hitlers Gestapo, likewise the very core of National Socialist fervor. If you admit these things, then you are in historical trouble, and it is trouble which the film Never Look Away helps to foment.

For some background it is worth turning to Julia Boyds fascinating Travellers in the Third Reich. This work is unusual in that it discusses just how similar Communism and National Socialism were, in some respects.She quotes Denis de Rougemont, a Christian Swiss writer and cultural theorist.De Rougemont began by thinkingthat Hitlers state was a regime of the right. But during a lengthy stay in Frankfurt as a visiting professor, he found himself involuntarily questioning this. What unsettled him, writes Boyd, was the fact that those who stood most naturally on the rightlawyers, doctors, industrialists and so onwere the very ones who most bitterly denounced National Socialism. Far from being a bulwark against Communism, they complained,it was itself communism in disguise [my emphasis].

De Rougemont recounted: They pointed out that only workers and peasants benefited from Nazi reforms, while their own values were being systematically destroyed by devious methods. They were taxed disproportionately, their family life had been irreparably harmed, parental authority sapped, religion stripped and education eliminated.

A lawyers wife complained to him, Every evening my two children are taken over by the Party. This experience was not all that different from what was happening at the same time to the children of Soviet parents.The Nazis, being utopian fanatics more concerned with the future than the present, were prepared to pay quite a high price for taking over the minds of the young. As Thomas Manns daughter Erika pointed out in her excoriating book on the subject, School for Barbarians, the quality of education was gravely damaged under the Hitler regime, which (as left-wing regimes also often do) promoted or protected bad but politically acceptable teachers, and polluted the teaching of all arts and historical subjects. It believed it was more urgent to teach the young what to think than to show them how to think.

Hitler himself taunted his opponents for their powerlessness against him. They might rage at him as much as they liked, but When an opponent declares I will not come over to your side I say calmly Your child belongs to us already . . . What are you? You will pass on. Your descendants, however, now stand in the new camp. In a short time they will know nothing but this new community. He was so nearly right.

As for the defeated left, a startling number of them came over to the new camp almost immediately. De Rougemont spoke to a renegade Communist who had switched sides and joined the Hitlerites, who said,

National Socialism was egalitarian and horribly modern. It sided with children against parents and (often) teachers. It built super-highways, gigantic holiday camps, space rockets, and jet engines. It planned to create mass car ownershipthough tanks, in the end, came first.In military matters it was open to the newest ideas and encouraged innovation and initiative. It poured resources into the movie industry, developed television, and sponsored a type of Godless modern architecture which can still be seen in the Berlin Olympic Stadium and the remnants of the Nuremberg parade grounds.Its leaders embraced sexual freedom.

And then there were Hitlers eugenics schemes, portrayed so heartbreakingly in Never Look Away. These were conducted in public at the beginning, and even endorsed by noisy propaganda campaigns in the media. And they were far from unique: Nazi Germany, in this case, was following the democracies.Hitlers eugenics squads began in ways that the rest of the world (at the time) could not easily object to. Compulsory sterilization of the supposedly mentally unfit was introduced in Germany a few months after National Socialism came to power. But several free and enlightened countriesincluding Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.S.had also permitted it in various forms, and would in some cases carry on doing so into our own era.

It was a progressive cause, embraced at the time by the progressives progressive, H. G. Wells. Marie Stopes, the great apostle of contraception in interwar Britain, was alsolike many among the progressives of the timea keen eugenicist.In 1935, she attended a Congress for Population Science in Nazi Berlin. In August 1939, she even sent Hitler a volume of her dreadful poems, accompanied by a treacly epistle about love. Yet all this has been forgotten amid continuing progressive admiration for Marie Stopess embrace ofwhat are nowadays known as reproductive rights. Marie Stopes International, a powerful and flourishing modern organization, still bears her name as it campaigns for and defends those reproductive rights.

Am I saying (someone will accuse me of this) that modern abortion and contraception campaigners are Nazis, or inheritors of Nazis?Certainly not. I regard any such claim as ridiculous rubbishas ridiculous as the claim that modern patriotic conservatives, skeptical about mass immigration, are Nazis or inheritors of Nazis.

My point is wholly different.It is that all ideas must be argued on their merits, and that all attempts to establish guilt by association should be regarded with suspicion. And that those who wish to use the Hitler era as a way of depriving others of legitimacy should understand that this period, precisely because it cast aside therestraints of Christian morality and duty, liberated many ideas from ancient, sometimes despised limits which turned out, in the end,to be wise and kind.

Peter Hitchensis a columnist for theMail on Sunday.

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Hitler the Progressive | Peter Hitchens - First Things

CULTURE Florence Tennis Club – The Florentine

CULTURE

Deirdre Pirro

September 18, 2019 - 16:19

Originally the largest park in Florence, the Cascine was a Medici hunting and farming estate, which passed to the grand duchy of Lorraine with the death of the last Medici in 1737. Although it had occasionally been open to the public for special events during the 18th century, it only became an actual public park during the brief reign of Elisa Baciocchi, grand duchess of Tuscany and Napoleons sister; it continued to be so after the City of Florence acquired the property in 1869. By the late 19th century, the 18 hectares of woods, tall trees, shady paths and lawns became a place where the townsfolk strolled, who gained easy access to the green space between 1880 and 1897 thanks to Florences original tramway, which linked the Cascine and the city centre (much like todays tram to Scandicci). It was the place to see and be seen, especially among the aristocracy and the ex-pat community. Even Queen Victoria in her carriage could often be seen there when on holiday in Florence.

TheCascine quickly became the ideal setting for ex-pats, nostalgic for the sports and pastimes they enjoyed back home; here they sought to recreate them. The first race horse meeting was held in the park in 1852 at the racecourse organized by the fabulously rich Russian count Anatole Demidoff and the Societ Anonima Fiorentina. In 1859, a shooting range was created, followed several years later by clay pigeon shooting facilities, and in 1870, a club of velocipedists, or speed cyclists, was inaugurated, using a flat dirt track until, in 1894, it was transformed into what is still the concrete velodrome for bike races.

With 30 founding members, some Florentine and others English, the Florence Tennis Club was founded in 1898, the fifth club to become part of the Italian Lawn Tennis Association established in 1894. Games were initially played on the grass until two clay courts were built. At the time, nets, posts, rackets and other equipment were furnished by the Anglo-American Supply Stores in via Cavour. The mens dress code on court was modelled on the English cricket style, whereas for womenclub membership was open to them from the very beginningthe required style was rigidly Victorian, meaning they were encumbered to play in long skirts, tight bodices and vexatious hats. Tournaments were held for men from 1900 and for women from 1902, when Florence became the first club in Italy to allow women to compete. In fact, a cup is dedicated to Rhoda de Bellegarde de Saint Lary, a club member and the winner of the first and second Italian womens championships in 1913 and 1914. She would die of Spanish flu in 1918 while serving as a Red Cross nurse during World War I.

The classical, red brick, then single-storied, clubhouse with its white door and window frames was designed by architect Pietro Berti and gifted to the club by the wealthy industrialist and first president, Count Giovanni Cosimo Cini, in 1900. There, in May 1910, representatives from the 12 most important Italian tennis clubs met and inaugurated the Italian Tennis Federation, voting in Florence club member Piero Antinori as president.

Over the years, the public has been entertained with tournaments featuring many Italian champions like Nicola Pietrangeli, Lea Pericoli and Adriano Panatta, in addition to international stars including Ille Nastase, Vitas Gerulaitis and Roy Emerson. Five Davis Cup challenges (in 1933 with Yugoslavia, 1958 with India, 1959 with South Africa, 1962 with Russia, and 1993 with Australia) were contested on the Florentine courts and, since 1976, the International City of Florence Juniors Tournament has been held there at Easter every year, whose winners include Jennifer Capriati and Roger Federer.

In November 2003, the Florence Tennis Club joined the prestigious Association of Centenary Tennis Clubs, one of the 7 Italian clubs and only 79 clubs worldwide that are over 100 years old. Today, this verdant and tranquil oasis comprises 560 members, 10 red clay courts, two padel (a cross between tennis and squash) courts and a football pitch. The mens and womens changing rooms are in the clubhouse, although the small wooden hut used for that purpose when the club first opened can still be seen on the grounds. The clubhouse also houses two card rooms and a reading room with a bar.

In the 1950s, a glass-enclosed restaurant was added and, during the summer, another restaurant is open near the swimming pool built in 1939 by Gherardo Bosio, a major exponent of Italian rationalism architecture. A well-equipped gym and sauna were made available to members in 2011. Professional tennis coaches teach courses, from beginners to advanced, for youths and adults from September until June, while summer camps are organised for children and adolescents between the ages of 4 to 16.

From July 18 to 21, 2019, the Florence Tennis Club proudly hosted the 7th International City of Florence Wheelchair Tournament with about 40 competitors from Italy, Malaysia, Australia, Colombia, France, Austria, Spain, England, Turkey and China, an important date on the international calendar for disabled athletes and for the city. Prior to this, the Florence Club hosted two national wheelchair tournaments in 2011 and 2012, as well as an earlier international wheelchair tournament in 2013.

This month, excitement among spectators is already mounting as tennis fans flock to the Cascine to watch the revived second edition of the Florence Tennis Cup Tuscan Airports Trophy, as part of the ATP Challenger Tour. From September 23 to 29, the tournament will take place at the Florence Tennis Club with national and international players vying for 75,000 dollars in hospitality and prize money.

With 30 founding members, some Florentine and others English, the Florence Tennis Club was founded in 1898, the fifth club to become part of the Italian Lawn Tennis Association established in 1894.

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CULTURE Florence Tennis Club - The Florentine

Wicked! Modern Art’s Interest in the Occult – frieze.com

The resurgence of interest in magic today in art, popular culture and ritual practices is not without precedent: the occult has faded in and out of the cultural arena for more than a century, its seeds a feeling of lack and longing, from the development of Wicca after World War II to the esoteric counterculture of the 1960s. We can recognize this desire in our current moment steeped in advanced capitalism, swift gentrification and right-wing political gains in which magic holds the promise of connection and empowerment. It was also palpable in the 19th century, the setting of the first widespread occult revival since the Christianization of Europe, early-modern witch hunts and the so-called age of reason. It flourished in Europe, and France in particular, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. We can trace many current magical practices back to this time, from an occult use of the tarot to neopagan worship that identifies the triple goddess with the phases of the moon. Modern art, psychology and feminism also have their roots in this period, along with the monumental socio-economic effects of modernization.The face of Europe changed irrevocably: railways were vastly extended, suburbs sprouted factories and cities towered upwards, their narrow streets expanding into boulevards. Positivist science also ascended through these conditions, bolstered by the quick development and profitability of new industrial technologies. Yet, the dark side of technological progress isoften disillusionment, and it is in this sense of longing and decay that we can trace the beginnings of the belle-poque occult revival.

Like so many facets of modern life, the first seeds were sown during the 178999 French Revolution. Unleashing bloodshed and terror in the name of reason, its idealism soaring to hysterical heights, the revolution undermined its own guiding principles. The hegemony of rationalism so central to European thought since the Enlightenment was further eroded in subsequent decades, ina climate of conflict and unrest that saw the Napoleonic wars of180315, the revolutions of 1830 and 1848, and the short-lived, brutally supressed Paris Commune, an insurgent government that ruled from 18 March to 28 May 1871. (This thread ofdissent would be taken up by the Dadaists inthe 20th century, in response to the atrocities of World War I.) Traditional Christianity, too, was in profound crisis. Its worldview circumscribed to binaries of good and evil, spirit and body, culture and nature was increasingly seen as overly simplistic in the context of a complex, tumultuous universe.

The renewed interest in occultism was driven by a search for alternatives and origins, for a world that holds both chaos and coherence, its rhymes echoing through dimensions, its rhythms hinting at key truths. Movements that were founded in the 19th century, or which saw an upsurge in popularity, include Theosophy, Rosicrucianism, Martinism, Freemasonry, Gnosticism and neo-Catharism as well as local groups such as Londons Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. In art and literature, these ideas were taken up by the Symbolists: a loosely affiliated, international movement that flourished from the 1880s to the 1910s, particularly in Paris. Symbolist artists were not active practitioners of magic; their interest was rather in evoking the spiritual an elusive notion, perennially difficult to define, which was understood in contrast to the prevailing materialism of the time. In this sense, the movement can be seen, in part, as areaction to Impressionism, whose concerns were more formal, based on fleeting sensory impressions and grounded in everyday life. (Which is not to say that they were superficial: see Berthe Morisots incisive portraits of her sister Edna and Mary Cassatts studies of child subjectivity.)

For the Symbolists, esoteric knowledge was a means of accessing the scope of the mind and the quintessence beyond appearances. And fin-de-sicle Paris had no shortage of material: Edmond Baillys Librairie de lart indpendant (Bookshop of Independent Art), established in 1888, became a central meeting point for Symbolist artists and writers and for the discussion of occult topics, while Lucien Chamuels Librairie du merveilleux (Bookshop of the Marvellous) was popular with mystics and scholars. Theosophy was particularly influential. Founded by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and her colleagues in New York in 1875, the Theosophical Society aimed to distil common elements from the worlds religions and esoteric traditions and establish an essential, universal understanding. The idea of fundamental principles that could bridge East and West, Christ and the Buddha, was immensely attractive to a number of artists particularly in a context of colonial expansion, which aroused interest in similarities as well as in differences. The artist Odilon Redon was amongst those who frequented Baillys bookshop. Engaged in Theosophy particularly douard Schurs comparative studies of religious prophets as well as Buddhist and Indian philosophy, Redon realized numerous depictions of religious figures that evade traditional iconography and narratives. He focused instead on themes of light, death and introspection, as in The Death of Buddha (c.1899) and The Sacred Heart (The Buddha) (c.1906), which was closely based on an 1895 drawing the artist had made of Christ and thenrenamed.

It is interesting to note that both Symbolism and Theosophy claimed an affinity with science. While they rejected the sway of strict positivism founded on observation and quantifiable evidence they believed that the spiritual was one part of a definite truth and that their investigations chimed with a more encompassing science. Indeed, as Nadia Choucha writes in Surrealism & the Occult (1991), occultists often looked to scientific discoveries as proof of their own beliefs. Thus, the fourth dimension, first described by Charles Howard Hinton in his 1880 article What Is the Fourth Dimension?, supported the idea of the astral plane, while 20th-century physicists corroborated an understanding of the universe as fundamentally fluid and chaotic from Albert Einsteins theory of relativity to Werner Heisenbergs uncertainty principle and Henri Bergsons writings on multiple planes and the limits of sensory perception. Evolution and the search for biological origins, which occupied scientists from the 1860s onwards, also inspired both occultists and artists not as a sterile process of natural selection, but as a font of endless variety and wonder, which speaks to the creative energies at the foundations of life. We can read Redons self-described monsters in this light, most explicitly in Origins, a lithographic series from 1883. These creatures explore the fantastical possibilities of lifes genetic code, stemming from the artists studies of comparative anatomy and embryology, as well as from his close friendship with the plant physiologist Armand Clavaud, whose research on algae, Redon notes in Artists Secrets (1913), searched [] at the edge of the imperceptible world, for that life which lies between plant and animal.1 In one image from Origins, a flower gazes upwards, plush lashes forming petals, its pistil a round, open eye (Was It Upon a Flower That Nature First Attempted toBestow Sight?). Spirit of the Forest (1890) also explores the rhymes between plant and human life: its skeletal form crackles with vitality, as roots extend from its knotted leg bones and branches sprout from the base of its head (thelocation of the cerebellum chakra, or well of dreams, in Tantricthought).

Redons monsters underline a key idea in the history of art and magic: that the most original, compelling works often look to our foundations, rather than lofty, distant truths. While Symbolist art was frequently dismissed as being escapist and overly literary and largely still is today its focus on the dark, irrational aspects of our nature profoundly influenced the course of modern art, informing Surrealism in particular. (This interest was later echoed by Sigmund Freud, who would investigate the psychological drives and aberrations beyond social conditioning in his 1905 book, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.) A crucial source for these artists, and indeed for many modern ideas on magic, were the theories of the French occultist liphas Lvi, who emphasized the essential unity of opposites: of light and dark, positive and negative, masculine and feminine. In the frontispiece to his 185456 Dogma and Ritual of High Magic, Lvi illustrated this notion in an image of the deity Baphomet: an androgynous figure, both animal and human, winged and hoofed, which points towards the white moon of Chesed (mercy) and the black moon of Geburah (justice or severity).2 That Lvis Baphomet was widely misidentified as the Christian Devil speaks to the prevalence of a rigidly dualistic worldview. His idea went hand in hand with a renewed interest in archaic paganism, particularly in the creative and destructive energies of ancient Greek and Roman goddesses. Marvellous, elemental, indifferent to death, joy and suffering, the idea of daemonic power was the most potent opposition to a rational, materialist order; as Celia Rabinovitch writes in Surrealism and the Sacred (2002): With its connections to energy and eros, [the daemonic] remained the most subversive element of archaic thought that had survived throughout Western intellectualhistory.3

That such a concept of the goddess would undergird a new, more complex understanding of femininity is one of the most enduring and fascinating legacies of the 19th-century occult revival. Of course, this renewed archetype wasvery much of its time, emerging as an antidote to the rigidity and decay of an industrial, patriarchal society and mired in the anxieties of this context. This ambivalence is palpable inthe works of numerous Symbolist artists and, indeed, these images are widely credited with having introduced the figure of the femme fatale. Often appearing as a powerful, mythical figure or a hybrid creature such as the sphinx, harpy or chimera itself a manifestation of mutable, chthonic power the femme fatale intertwines death and sexuality, invoking our most immediate impressions of destruction and creation. Fernand Khnopffs painting The Caresses (1896) belongs to this repertoire: an image of affection and obsession, in which the sphinx embraces anandrogynous Oedipus, her indulgent expression at odds with her tensed, possessive bearing. The erotic, commanding female figure also appears in several works by Gustave Moreau, whose 1864 Oedipus and the Sphinx inspired Khnopffs canvas. Moreaus The Apparition (187677) is one of the most recognizable images of the femme fatale, depicting a semi-nude, bejewelled Salome conjuring the gruesome head of John the Baptist, the rich, red tones of his encrusted, streaming blood echoed in her sumptuous robe.

Such images are, ultimately, indicative ofwomens emancipation: an insistent topic by the mid-19th century, which saw the first wave of feminism. And, certainly, the resounding tone of a revived interest in the figure of the goddess in the 19th century and today is one of empowerment. That Symbolist artists were overwhelmingly male is a curious point, given that women were central to the occult revival, from Blavatsky to the influential women of the Golden Dawn and female mediums. (Itshould be noted that Impressionism, which was contemporaneous with Symbolism, was agender-equal movement.) Representationsby women that engage with the occult and the chthonic are more readily found amongst theSurrealists, whowere deeply influenced by Symbolism. Whereas artists such as Khnopff and Moreau drew on established iconographies, the Surrealists created new mythologies, linking primordial energies to the creativity ofthe unconscious. In Andr Bretons writings, notably Nadja (1928), woman represents this force through her connection to procreation, dreams and the underworld. For the female artists associated with Surrealism, this ideal was no doubt a burden, stifling them with the laurels of the muse. Yet, in their own art, occultism stimulated novel explorations of nature, creation and subjectivity. These works do not tend towards a facile identification of womanhood with creative power. Mret Oppenheims The Green Spectator (One Who Watches While Someone Dies) (1933/59), for instance, portrays nature as a dispassionate, cyclical force, its pared-down, columnar form both human and snake-like, its materials copper and wood painted to resemble serpentine signalling its primal origins: the underground world of the serpent.4

For Leonora Carrington, occultism inspired a penetrating personal iconography that is formally brilliant. The artist was fascinated by Celtic mythology, the folklore of Mexico (where she settled in 1942, after fleeing Europe) and modern occult theory, notably Robert Gravess 1948 book-length essay on myths, The White Goddess the greatest revelation of my life5 which articulated the Celtic triple goddess as Maiden, Mother and Crone: The New Moon is the white goddess of birth and growth; the Full Moon, the red goddess of love and battle; the Old Moon, the black goddess of death and divination. In Carringtons painting The House Opposite (1945), the three goddesses tend the cauldron of a sprawling, cosmic home: ametaphor for life and the self, with each space a threshold to the next. Their hearth sits in theunderworld, a sapphire spring and two egg-shaped chickens at their feet: symbols of the alchemical egg, the prima materia at the origin oflife. Death visits the room above, sucking out the soul of a supine figure, while, in the next space, a woman sits bolt upright inbed, as if waking from a nightmare. Memory and dream reside in the water-filled glade below, where awoman sobs beside a rocking horse arecurring image in Carringtons work, recalling a toy from her lonely, restricted childhood. The creature is unbridledinthe dining hall, where awoman eats at the table, her white hair resembling a mane, her shadow a horse. Perhaps she is Rhiannon, the Celtic lunar goddess of art, transformation and rebirth. A woman who found an affinity between the studio, kitchen and alchemical laboratory, Carrington uses the home as ametaphor for magical thinking, uniting decay and regeneration, life and the imagination.

This article first appeared in Frieze Masters issue 8 with the headline The Other Side.

Main image:Leonora Carrington, TheHouse Opposite (detail), 1945, temperaonboard, 33 82 cm. Courtesy: West Dean CollegeofArts andConservation

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Wicked! Modern Art's Interest in the Occult - frieze.com