Allison C. Crawley
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Allison C. Crawley.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996
Allison C. Crawley; Doug A. Brooks; Vivienne Muller; Birgit A. Petersen; Elizabeth L. Isaac; Julie Bielicki; Barbara M. King; Christine D. Boulter; Alison J. Moore; Nick L. Fazzalari; Don S. Anson; Sharon Byers; John J. Hopwood
We report studies that suggest enzyme replacement therapy will result in a significant reduction in disease progression and tissue pathology in patients with Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome (Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI, MPS VI). A feline model for MPS VI was used to evaluate tissue distribution and clinical efficacy of three forms of recombinant human N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase (rh4S, EC 3.1.6.1). Intravenously administered rh4S was rapidly cleared from circulation. The majority of rh4S was distributed to liver, but was also detected in most other tissues. Tissue half-life was approximately 2-4 d. Three MPS VI cats given regular intravenous infusions of rh4S for up to 20 mo showed variable reduction of storage vacuoles in Kupffer cells and connective tissues, however cartilage chondrocytes remained vacuolated. Vertebral bone mineral volume was improved in two MPS VI cats in which therapy was initiated before skeletal maturity, and increased bone volume appeared to correlate with earlier age of onset of therapy. One cat showed greater mobility in response to therapy.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997
Allison C. Crawley; Krystyna H. Niedzielski; Elizabeth L. Isaac; Richard Davey; Sharon Byers; John J. Hopwood
We report evidence of a dose responsive effect of enzyme replacement therapy in mucopolysaccharidosis type VI cats from birth, at the clinical, biochemical, and histopathological level. Cats treated with weekly, intravenous recombinant human N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase at 1 and 5 mg/kg, were heavier, more flexible, had greatly reduced or no spinal cord compression, and had almost normal urinary glycosaminoglycan levels. There was near normalization or complete reversal of lysosomal storage in heart valve, aorta, skin, dura, liver, and brain perivascular cells. No reduction in lysosomal vacuolation was observed in cartilage or cornea; however, articular cartilage was thinner and external ear pinnae were larger in some treated cats. Degenerative joint changes were not obviously delayed in treated cats. Skeletal pathology was reduced, with more normalized bone dimensions and with more uniform bone density and trabecular pattern clearly visible on radiographs by 5 to 6 mo; however, differences between 1 and 5 mg/kg dose rates were not clearly distinguishable. At a dose of 0.2 mg/kg, disease was not significantly altered in the majority of parameters examined. Lysosomal storage was present in all tissues examined in the midterm mucopolysaccharidosis type VI fetus and increased rapidly in extent and severity from birth.
Brain Research | 2006
Allison C. Crawley; Briony Gliddon; Dyane Auclair; Suzanne L. Brodie; Craig Hirte; Barbara M. King; Maria Fuller; Kim M. Hemsley; John J. Hopwood
The original mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPS IIIA) mice were identified in a mixed background with contributions from four different strains. To ensure long-term stability and genetic homogeneity of this lysosomal storage disease (LSD) model, the aim of this study was to develop and characterize a C57BL/6 congenic strain. The B6.Cg-Sgsh(mps3a) strain compares favorably with the original mixed donor strain, exhibiting low liver sulfamidase activity and significant brain heparan sulfate-derived disaccharide elevation from birth. A rapid increase in brain disaccharide levels occurred after birth, with a plateau reached by 13 weeks of age at 110x the levels observed in brains of age-matched unaffected mice. Typical lysosomal inclusions were observed in cerebral cortical and cerebellar neurons and in liver hepatocytes and Kupffer cells. Ubiquitin-positive spheroids and GM(2)-ganglioside were also detected in brain. Using the Morris water maze in male mice, impaired memory and spatial learning was evident at 20 weeks of age in B6.Cg-Sgsh(mps3a) MPS IIIA mice. Other behavioral changes include motor, cognitive and sensory deficits, and aggression. Male B6.Cg-Sgsh(mps3a) MPS IIIA mice exhibited more behavioral abnormalities than B6.Cg-Sgsh(mps3a) MPS IIIA females, as observed previously in the original mixed background strain. Affected mice generally survive to 9 to 12 months of age, before death or euthanasia for humane reasons. Overall, minor differences were apparent between the new congenic and previously described mixed MPS IIIA strains. Availability of an in-bred strain will ensure more reproducible experimental outcomes thereby assisting in our goal of developing effective therapies for LSD with central nervous system disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Gouri Yogalingam; Tom Litjens; Julie Bielicki; Allison C. Crawley; Vivienne Muller; Donald S. Anson; John J. Hopwood
Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by a deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine 4-sulfatase (4S) leading to the lysosomal accumulation and urinary excretion of dermatan sulfate. MPS VI has also been described in the Siamese cat. As an initial step toward enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant feline 4S (rf4S) in MPS VI cats, the feline 4S cDNA was isolated and expressed in CHO-KI cells and rf4S was immunopurified from the culture medium. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis showed that the precursor form of immunopurified rf4S was a 66-kDa polypeptide that underwent maturation to a 43-44-kDa polypeptide. Endocytosis of rf4S by cultured feline MPS VI myoblasts was predominantly mediated by a mannose 6-phosphate receptor and resulted in the correction of dermatan sulfate storage. The mutation causing feline MPS VI was identified as a base substitution at codon 476, altering a leucine codon to a proline (L476P). The L476P allele displayed no detectable 4S activity when expressed in CHO-KI cells and was observed only as a “precursor” polypeptide that was not secreted into the medium. Identification of the mutation has allowed the development of a rapid PCR-based screening method to genotype individuals within the cat colony.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009
Kim M. Hemsley; Amanda J. Luck; Allison C. Crawley; Sofia Hassiotis; Helen Beard; Barbara King; Tomas Rozek; Tina Rozaklis; Maria Fuller; John J. Hopwood
Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA is a neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder characterized by progressive loss of learned skills, sleep disturbance and behavioural problems. Absent or greatly reduced activity of sulphamidase, a lysosomal protein, results in intracellular accumulation of heparan sulphate. Subsequent neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration typify this and many other lysosomal storage disorders. We propose that intra‐cerebrospinal fluid protein delivery represents a potential therapeutic avenue for treatment of this and other neurodegenerative conditions; however, technical restraints restrict examination of its use prior to adulthood in mice. We have used a naturally‐occurring Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA mouse model to determine the effectiveness of combining intravenous protein replacement (1 mg/kg) from birth to 6 weeks of age with intra‐cerebrospinal fluid sulphamidase delivery (100 μg, fortnightly from 6 weeks) on behaviour, the level of heparan sulphate‐oligosaccharide storage and other neuropathology. Mice receiving combination treatment exhibited similar clinical improvement and reduction in heparan sulphate storage to those only receiving intra‐cerebrospinal fluid enzyme. Reductions in micro‐ and astrogliosis and delayed development of ubiquitin‐positive lesions were seen in both groups. A third group of intravenous‐only treated mice did not exhibit clinical or neuropathological improvements. Intra‐cerebrospinal fluid injection of sulphamidase effectively, but dose‐dependently, treats neurological pathology in Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA, even when treatment begins in mice with established disease.
Bone | 1997
Sharon Byers; J.D. Nuttall; Allison C. Crawley; John J. Hopwood; K. Smith; Nicola L. Fazzalari
A range of skeletal abnormalities are evident in mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI, Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome) including short stature and dysostosis multiplex, resulting from a deficiency in the lysosomal hydrolase N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulphatase (4S). In this article, bone pathology was assessed in a feline model of MPS VI to evaluate the efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) as a treatment modality for this genetic disorder. Osteopenia is clearly evident in MPS VI animals, with bone mineral volume (BV/TV) falling well below that of normal animals (4.39% vs. 20.11%, respectively). Trabecular bone architecture was also affected in MPS VI with fewer, thinner, and more widely spaced trabeculae apparent. Bone formation rate (BFR/BS) was also lower in MPS VI animals than controls (0.0011 mm3/mm2 per day vs. 0.008 mm3/mm2 per day, respectively). Vertebral and tibial bone length in MPS VI animals progressively fell behind normal values with increasing age, as did cortical bone thickness. Vertebral body shape was also altered. ERT with recombinant human 4S (rh4S) resulted in a vertebral BV/TV of 8.23% in animals treated with an intravenous enzyme dose of 1 mg/kg and a BV/TV of 14.33% in animals treated with a dose of 5 mg/kg. BFR/BS also increased to 0.0034 mm3/mm2 per day in animals treated with enzyme doses of either 1.0 or 5.0 mg/kg rh4S. All other affected histomorphometric parameters also improved with ERT to a level intermediate between MPS VI untreated animals and normals. However, individual animals treated with 0.2 mg/kg rh4S intravenously or 1.0 mg/kg rh4S administered subcutaneously did not exhibit an improvement over untreated MPS VI animals. Vertebral and tibial bone lengths, tibial cortical bone thickness, and vertebral body shape also responded to ERT, with a trend away from the untreated group. Thus, ERT had a positive effect on bone development in MPS VI animals that was dependent upon the dose of enzyme administered and the route of administration.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998
Allison C. Crawley; Gouri Yogalingam; Vivienne Muller; John J. Hopwood
Mucopolysaccharidosis type VI (MPS VI) is a lysosomal storage disease caused by a deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulfatase (4S). A feline MPS VI model used to demonstrate efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy is due to the homozygous presence of an L476P mutation in 4-sulfatase. An additional mutation, D520N, inherited independently from L476P and recently identified in the same family of cats, has resulted in three clinical phenotypes. L476P homozygotes exhibit dwarfism and facial dysmorphia due to epiphyseal dysplasia, abnormally low leukocyte 4S/betahexosaminidase ratios, dermatan sulfaturia, lysosomal inclusions in most tissues including chondrocytes, corneal clouding, degenerative joint disease, and abnormal leukocyte inclusions. Similarly, D520N/D520N and L476P/D520N cats have abnormally low leukocyte 4S/betahexosaminidase ratios, mild dermatan sulfaturia, lysosomal inclusions in some chondrocytes, and abnormal leukocyte inclusions. However, both have normal growth and appearance. In addition, L476P/D520N cats have a high incidence of degenerative joint disease. We conclude that L476P/D520N cats have a very mild MPS VI phenotype not previously described in MPS VI humans. The study of L476P/D520N and D520N/ D520N genotypes will improve understanding of genotype to phenotype correlations and the pathogenesis of skeletal dysplasia and joint disease in MPS VI, and will assist in development of therapies to prevent lysosomal storage in chondrocytes.
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2009
Kim M. Hemsley; Elizabeth J. Norman; Allison C. Crawley; Dyane Auclair; Barbara King; Maria Fuller; Debbie L. Lang; Caroline J. Dean; R. D. Jolly; John J. Hopwood
Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPS IIIA) results from lack of functional sulfamidase (SGSH), a lysosomal enzyme. Its substrate, heparan sulfate, and other secondarily-stored compounds subsequently accumulate primarily within the central nervous system (CNS), resulting in progressive mental deterioration and early death. Presently there is no treatment. As a potential therapeutic strategy, recombinant human sulfamidase (rhSGSH) was administered into the CSF (via the cerebellomedullary cistern) of three adult MPS IIIA dogs either twice with a 4 day interval, or weekly for up to 4 weeks. The dogs were euthanased 24 h post-injection along with one untreated unaffected and two MPS IIIA controls. We have examined the three dimensional pattern of distribution of enzyme in the CNS and its ability to reduce primary substrate storage. High concentrations of rhSGSH protein, with up to 39-fold normal enzyme activity levels were detected within widespread areas of the CNS. RhSGSH protein was also detectable by immunohistochemistry in neurons and glia in all three enzyme-treated dogs. In both weekly-treated dogs, relative levels of a heparan sulfate-derived disaccharide, measured using tandem mass spectrometry, were lower in many brain regions when compared to untreated MPS IIIA controls. A moderately severe meningitis was also present as well as antibodies to rhSGSH in CSF/plasma. These findings demonstrate proof of principle that MPS IIIA can be treated by intracisternal enzyme replacement warranting further experiments in animals tolerant to rhSGSH. This enzyme delivery method may represent a means of treating neuropathology in MPS IIIA and other lysosomal storage disorders affecting the CNS.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2008
Adeline A. Lau; Allison C. Crawley; John J. Hopwood; Kim M. Hemsley
Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) IIIA, or Sanfilippo syndrome, is a lysosomal storage disorder characterized by severe and progressive neuropathology. Following an asymptomatic period, patients may present with sleep disturbances, cognitive decline, aggressive tendencies and hyperactivity. A naturally-occurring mouse model of MPS IIIA also exhibits many of these behavioral features and has been recently back-crossed onto a C57BL/6 genetic background. To more thoroughly characterize the behavioral phenotype of congenic MPS IIIA mice, we assessed exploratory activity and unconditioned anxiety-related behavior in the elevated plus maze (EPM) and open field locomotor activity. Although MPS IIIA male mice were less active in the EPM at 18 and 20 weeks of age, they were more likely to explore the open arms than their normal counter-parts suggesting reduced anxiety. Repeated EPM testing reduced exploration of the open arms in MPS IIIA mice. In the open field test, significant reductions in activity were evident in naïve-tested male MPS IIIA mice from 10 weeks of age. Female normal and MPS IIIA mice displayed similar exploratory activity in the open field test. These differences in anxiety and locomotor activity will allow us to evaluate the efficacy of therapeutic regimes for MPS IIIA as a forerunner to developing safe and effective therapies for Sanfilippo patients.
Pediatric Research | 2000
Sharon Byers; Allison C. Crawley; Leanne K. Brumfield; Jacqueline D Nuttall; John J. Hopwood
Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) in the MPS VI cat is effective at reducing or eliminating pathology in most connective tissues. One exception is that cartilage and chondrocytes remained distended with extensive lysosomal vacuolation after long-term, high-dose ERT. In this study, we demonstrate that recombinant human N-acetylgalactosamine-4-sulphatase (4S) is taken up by chondrocytes via a mannose-6-phosphate-dependent mechanism and is effective at removing MPS storage. In vitro, the penetration of 4S into articular cartilage is low (partitioning coefficient = 0.06) and i.v. administered enzyme does not distribute significantly into articular cartilage in vivo. To alter the tissue distribution of 4S, the enzyme was coupled to ethylene diamine or poly-L-lysine, increasing its overall charge and diffusion into cartilage, and the dosing frequency of unmodified 4S was increased. Modification resulted in active 4S that maintained its ability to correct MPS storage and increased the partitioning coefficient of 4S into cartilage by 77% and 50% for ethylene diamine and poly-L-lysine, respectively. However, in vivo ERT studies demonstrated that response to therapy was not significantly improved by either the enzyme modifications or change to the dosing regimen, when compared with ERT with unmodified enzyme. Distribution experiments indicated the majority of enzyme is taken up by the liver irrespective of modification. To optimize therapy and improve the amount of enzyme reaching cartilage and other tissues demonstrating poor uptake, it may be necessary to bypass the liver or prolong plasma half-life so that proportionately more enzyme is delivered to other tissues.