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Canavan disease

Canavan disease, or Canavan–Van Bogaert–Bertrand disease, is a rare and fatal autosomal recessive[1] degenerative disease that causes progressive damage to nerve cells and loss of white matter in the brain.[2] It is one of the most common degenerative cerebral diseases of infancy.[3] It is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme aminoacylase 2,[4] and is one of a group of genetic diseases referred to as leukodystrophies. It is characterized by degeneration of myelin in the phospholipid layer insulating the axon of a neuron and is associated with a gene located on human chromosome 17.

Canavan disease
Other namesCanavan–van Bogaert–Bertrand disease
SpecialtyEndocrinology, neurology 

Symptoms and signs edit

Symptoms of the most common (and most serious) form of Canavan disease typically appear in early infancy usually between the first three to six months of age.[4] Canavan disease then progresses rapidly from that stage, with typical cases involving intellectual disability, loss of previously acquired motor skills, feeding difficulties, abnormal muscle tone (i.e., initial floppiness – hypotonia – that may eventually translate into spasticity), poor head control, and megalocephaly (abnormally enlarged head). Paralysis, blindness, or seizures may also occur.[4]

There exists a much less common variant of Canavan disease which is generally much less serious, and involves later onset of symptoms, which are often mild and nonspecific enough to go unrecognized as manifestations of Canavan's disease.[5] This variant does not seem to have any effect on lifespan, and is typically limited to minor cases of speech and motor skill development delay.[6]

Pathophysiology edit

 
Canavan disease has an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance.

Canavan disease is inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion. When both parents are carriers, the chance of having an affected child is 25%. Genetic counseling and genetic testing are recommended for families with two parental carriers.[7]

Canavan disease is caused by a defective ASPA gene which is responsible for the production of the enzyme aspartoacylase. Decreased aspartoacylase activity prevents the normal breakdown of N-acetylaspartate, wherein the accumulation of N-acetylaspartate, or lack of its further metabolism interferes with growth of the myelin sheath of the nerve fibers of the brain. The myelin sheath is the fatty covering that surrounds nerve cells and acts as an insulator, allowing for efficient transmission of nerve impulses.[citation needed][8]

Diagnosis edit

The diagnosis of neonatal/infantile Canavan disease relies on demonstration of very high concentration of N-acetylaspartic acid (NAA) in the urine. In mild/juvenile Canavan disease, NAA may only be slightly elevated; thus, the diagnosis relies on molecular genetic testing of ASPA, the gene encoding the enzyme aspartoacylase.[9]

Treatment edit

No cure for Canavan disease is known, nor is there a standard course of treatment. Treatment is symptomatic and supportive. Physical therapy may help improve motor skills, and educational programs may help improve communication skills. Seizures are treated with antiepileptic drugs and gastrostomy is used to help maintain adequate food intake and hydration when swallowing difficulties exist.[10] Also, an experimental treatment uses lithium citrate. When a person has Canavan disease, their levels of N-acetylaspartate are chronically elevated. The lithium citrate has proven in a rat genetic model of Canavan disease to be able to significantly decrease levels of N-acetyl aspartate. When tested on a human, the subject's condition reversed during a two-week wash-out period after withdrawal of lithium.[citation needed]

The investigation revealed both decreased N-acetylaspartate levels in regions of the brain tested and magnetic resonance spectroscopic values that are more characteristic of normal development and myelination. This evidence suggests that a larger controlled trial of lithium may be warranted as supportive therapy for children with Canavan disease.[11]

Experimental gene therapy trial results, published in 2002, used a healthy gene to take over for the defective one that causes Canavan disease.[12] In human trials, the results of which were published in 2012, this method appeared to improve the life of the patient without long-term adverse effects during a five-year follow-up.[13]

Prognosis edit

Canavan disease typically results in death or development of life-threatening conditions by the age of ten, though life expectancy is variable,[14] and is highly dependent on specific circumstances.[15] On the other hand, the milder variants of the disorder seem not to have any effect on lifespan.[6]

Prevalence edit

Although Canavan disease may occur in any ethnic group, it mostly affects people of Eastern European Jewish ancestry with about one in 40 (2.5%) individuals of Eastern European (Ashkenazi) Jewish ancestry being a carrier.[16]

History edit

Canavan disease was first described in 1931 by Myrtelle Canavan.[17] In 1931, she co-wrote a paper discussing the case of a child who had died at 16 months old and whose brain had a spongy white section. Canavan was the first to identify this degenerative disorder of the central nervous system, which was later named Canavan disease.[18]

Lawsuit edit

The discovery of the gene for Canavan disease, and subsequent events, generated considerable controversy. In 1987, the Greenbergs, a family with two children affected by Canavan disease, donated tissue samples to Reuben Matalon, a researcher at the University of Chicago, who was looking for the Canavan gene. He successfully identified the gene in 1993, and developed a test for it that would enable antenatal (before birth) counseling of couples at risk of having a child with the disease.[19] For a while, the Canavan Foundation offered free genetic testing using Matalon's test.[20]

However, in 1997, after he relocated to Florida, Matalon's new employer, Miami Children's Hospital, patented the gene and started claiming royalties on the genetic test, forcing the Canavan Foundation to withdraw their free testing. A subsequent lawsuit brought by the Canavan Foundation against Miami Children's Hospital was resolved with a sealed out-of-court settlement.[21] The case is sometimes cited in arguments about the appropriateness of patenting genes.[citation needed]

Research edit

Research involving triacetin supplementation has shown promise in a rat model.[22] Triacetin, which can be enzymatically cleaved to form acetate, enters the brain more readily than the negatively charged acetate. The defective enzyme in Canavan disease, aspartoacylase, converts N-acetylaspartate into aspartate and acetate. Mutations in the gene for aspartoacylase prevent the breakdown of N-acetylaspartate, and reduce brain acetate availability during brain development. Acetate supplementation using triacetin is meant to provide the missing acetate so brain development can continue normally.[citation needed]

A team of researchers headed by Paola Leone at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, has tried a procedure involving the insertion of six catheters into the brain that deliver a solution containing 600 to 900 billion engineered virus particles. The virus, a modified version of adeno-associated virus, is designed to replace the aspartoacylase enzyme.[12] Children treated with this procedure to date have shown marked improvements, including the growth of myelin, with decreased levels of the N-acetylaspartate toxin.[23]

A team of researchers of University of Massachusetts Medical School is working on developing rAAV-based and optimized gene replacement therapy, that would travel across the blood-brain-barrier.[24][25]

Researchers discovered the first drug-like inhibitors of N-acetyltransferase.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Namboodiri, Am; Peethambaran, A; Mathew, R; Sambhu, Pa; Hershfield, J; Moffett, Jr; Madhavarao, Cn (June 2006). "Canavan disease and the role of N-acetylaspartate in myelin synthesis". Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology. 252 (1–2): 216–23. doi:10.1016/j.mce.2006.03.016. PMID 16647192. S2CID 12255670.
  2. ^ Bokhari, Maria R.; Debopam, Samanta; Bokhari, Syed Rizwan A. (July 6, 2020). "StatPearls". National Center for Biotechnology Information. from the original on 2021-06-10. Retrieved 2021-04-06.
  3. ^ "Canavan Disease". NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders). Retrieved 2021-04-06.
  4. ^ a b c Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM): 271900
  5. ^ Reference, Genetics Home. "Canavan disease". Genetics Home Reference. Retrieved 2017-06-14.
  6. ^ a b Ph.D, Evelyn B. Kelly (2013-01-07). Encyclopedia of Human Genetics and Disease [2 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-38714-2.
  7. ^ "Screening | Canavan Foundation". www.canavanfoundation.org. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  8. ^ MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia. (2019). Myelin. In Medlineplus.gov. Retrieved June 26, 2021, https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/002261.htm
  9. ^ Matalon, Reuben; Delgado, Lisvania; Michals-Matalon, Kimberlee (1993), Adam, Margaret P.; Ardinger, Holly H.; Pagon, Roberta A.; Wallace, Stephanie E. (eds.), "Canavan Disease", GeneReviews®, Seattle (WA): University of Washington, Seattle, PMID 20301412, retrieved 2021-09-10
  10. ^ "Canavan disease; Spongy degeneration of the central nervous system". NCATS program. Genetic and rare diseases information center. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  11. ^ Assadi, M.; Janson, C.; Wang, D. J.; Goldfarb, O.; Suri, N.; Bilaniuk, L.; Leone, P. (Jul 2010). "Lithium citrate reduces excessive intra-cerebral N-acetyl aspartate in Canavan disease". European Journal of Paediatric Neurology. 14 (4): 354–359. doi:10.1016/j.ejpn.2009.11.006. PMID 20034825.
  12. ^ a b Janson, Christopher; McPhee, Scott; Bilaniuk, Larissa; Haselgrove, John; Testaiuti, Mark; Freese, Andrew; Wang, Dah-Jyuu; Shera, David; Hurh, Peter; Rupin, Joan; Saslow, Elizabeth; Goldfarb, Olga; Goldberg, Michael; Larijani, Ghassem; Sharrar, William; Liouterman, Larisa; Camp, Angelique; Kolodny, Edwin; Samulski, Jude; Leone, Paola (20 July 2002). "Clinical protocol. Gene Therapy of Canavan Disease: AAV-2 Vector for Neurosurgical Delivery of Aspartoacylase Gene (ASPA) to the Human Brain". Human Gene Therapy. 13 (11): 1391–1412. doi:10.1089/104303402760128612. PMID 12162821. S2CID 21318465.
  13. ^ Leone, P.; Shera, D.; McPhee, S. W. J.; Francis, J. S.; Kolodny, E. H.; Bilaniuk, L. T.; Wang, D.-J.; Assadi, M.; Goldfarb, O.; Goldman, H. W.; Freese, A.; Young, D.; During, M. J.; Samulski, R. J.; Janson, C. G. (19 December 2012). "Long-Term Follow-Up After Gene Therapy for Canavan Disease". Science Translational Medicine. 4 (165): 165ra163. doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.3003454. PMC 3794457. PMID 23253610.
  14. ^ "Canavan disease". Genetics Home Reference. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  15. ^ "Canavan Disease – NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders)". NORD (National Organization for Rare Disorders). Retrieved 2017-06-14.
  16. ^ "Am I At Risk? | Canavan Foundation". www.canavanfoundation.org. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
  17. ^ Canavan MM (1931). "Schilder's Encephalitis Periaxialis Diffusa. Report of a Case in a Child Aged Sixteen and One-Half Months". Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry. 25 (2): 299–308. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1931.02230020085005.
  18. ^ Dr. Myrtelle May Canavan National Library of Medicine: Changing the Face of Medicine: Physicians. Accessed July 21, 2009.
  19. ^ Matalon, R (1997). "Canavan disease: diagnosis and molecular analysis". Genetic Testing. 1 (1): 21–5. doi:10.1089/gte.1997.1.21. PMID 10464621.
  20. ^ "Families Sue Over Gene Study of Canavan Disease". Los Angeles Times. November 19, 2000. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  21. ^ Colaianni, A; Chandrasekharan, S; Cook-Deegan, R (April 2010). "Impact of gene patents and licensing practices on access to genetic testing and carrier screening for Tay–Sachs and Canavan disease". Genetics in Medicine. 12 (4 Suppl): S5–S14. doi:10.1097/gim.0b013e3181d5a669. PMC 3042321. PMID 20393311.
  22. ^ Mathew R, Arun P, Madhavarao CN, Moffett JR, Namboodiri MA (2010). "Metabolic acetate therapy improves phenotype in the tremor rat model of Canavan disease". J Inherit Metab Dis. 33 (3): 195–210. doi:10.1007/s10545-010-9100-z. PMC 2877317. PMID 20464498.
  23. ^ "Our Story: The Search for a Cure". Canavan Research Foundation. Retrieved Nov 22, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ "Slow March Toward a Canavan Cure". The Scientist Magazine®.
  25. ^ Gessler, D. J.; Li, D.; Xu, H.; Su, Q.; Sanmiguel, J.; Tuncer, S.; Moore, C.; King, J.; Matalon, R.; Gao, G. (2017). "Redirecting N-acetylaspartate metabolism in the central nervous system normalizes myelination and rescues Canavan disease". JCI Insight. 2 (3): e90807. doi:10.1172/jci.insight.90807. PMC 5291725. PMID 28194442.
  26. ^ Stecula A, Hussain M, Viola RE (2020). "Discovery of Novel Inhibitors of a Critical Brain Enzyme Using a Homology Model and a Deep Convolutional Neural Network". J Med Chem. 63 (16): 8867–8875. doi:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.0c00473. PMID 32787146. S2CID 221123632.

External links edit

  • GeneReviews/NCBI/UW/NIH entry on Canavan disease

canavan, disease, canavan, bogaert, bertrand, disease, rare, fatal, autosomal, recessive, degenerative, disease, that, causes, progressive, damage, nerve, cells, loss, white, matter, brain, most, common, degenerative, cerebral, diseases, infancy, caused, defic. Canavan disease or Canavan Van Bogaert Bertrand disease is a rare and fatal autosomal recessive 1 degenerative disease that causes progressive damage to nerve cells and loss of white matter in the brain 2 It is one of the most common degenerative cerebral diseases of infancy 3 It is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme aminoacylase 2 4 and is one of a group of genetic diseases referred to as leukodystrophies It is characterized by degeneration of myelin in the phospholipid layer insulating the axon of a neuron and is associated with a gene located on human chromosome 17 Canavan diseaseOther namesCanavan van Bogaert Bertrand diseaseSpecialtyEndocrinology neurology Contents 1 Symptoms and signs 2 Pathophysiology 3 Diagnosis 4 Treatment 5 Prognosis 6 Prevalence 7 History 7 1 Lawsuit 8 Research 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksSymptoms and signs editSymptoms of the most common and most serious form of Canavan disease typically appear in early infancy usually between the first three to six months of age 4 Canavan disease then progresses rapidly from that stage with typical cases involving intellectual disability loss of previously acquired motor skills feeding difficulties abnormal muscle tone i e initial floppiness hypotonia that may eventually translate into spasticity poor head control and megalocephaly abnormally enlarged head Paralysis blindness or seizures may also occur 4 There exists a much less common variant of Canavan disease which is generally much less serious and involves later onset of symptoms which are often mild and nonspecific enough to go unrecognized as manifestations of Canavan s disease 5 This variant does not seem to have any effect on lifespan and is typically limited to minor cases of speech and motor skill development delay 6 Pathophysiology edit nbsp Canavan disease has an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance Canavan disease is inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion When both parents are carriers the chance of having an affected child is 25 Genetic counseling and genetic testing are recommended for families with two parental carriers 7 Canavan disease is caused by a defective ASPA gene which is responsible for the production of the enzyme aspartoacylase Decreased aspartoacylase activity prevents the normal breakdown of N acetylaspartate wherein the accumulation of N acetylaspartate or lack of its further metabolism interferes with growth of the myelin sheath of the nerve fibers of the brain The myelin sheath is the fatty covering that surrounds nerve cells and acts as an insulator allowing for efficient transmission of nerve impulses citation needed 8 Diagnosis editThe diagnosis of neonatal infantile Canavan disease relies on demonstration of very high concentration of N acetylaspartic acid NAA in the urine In mild juvenile Canavan disease NAA may only be slightly elevated thus the diagnosis relies on molecular genetic testing of ASPA the gene encoding the enzyme aspartoacylase 9 Treatment editNo cure for Canavan disease is known nor is there a standard course of treatment Treatment is symptomatic and supportive Physical therapy may help improve motor skills and educational programs may help improve communication skills Seizures are treated with antiepileptic drugs and gastrostomy is used to help maintain adequate food intake and hydration when swallowing difficulties exist 10 Also an experimental treatment uses lithium citrate When a person has Canavan disease their levels of N acetylaspartate are chronically elevated The lithium citrate has proven in a rat genetic model of Canavan disease to be able to significantly decrease levels of N acetyl aspartate When tested on a human the subject s condition reversed during a two week wash out period after withdrawal of lithium citation needed The investigation revealed both decreased N acetylaspartate levels in regions of the brain tested and magnetic resonance spectroscopic values that are more characteristic of normal development and myelination This evidence suggests that a larger controlled trial of lithium may be warranted as supportive therapy for children with Canavan disease 11 Experimental gene therapy trial results published in 2002 used a healthy gene to take over for the defective one that causes Canavan disease 12 In human trials the results of which were published in 2012 this method appeared to improve the life of the patient without long term adverse effects during a five year follow up 13 Prognosis editCanavan disease typically results in death or development of life threatening conditions by the age of ten though life expectancy is variable 14 and is highly dependent on specific circumstances 15 On the other hand the milder variants of the disorder seem not to have any effect on lifespan 6 Prevalence editAlthough Canavan disease may occur in any ethnic group it mostly affects people of Eastern European Jewish ancestry with about one in 40 2 5 individuals of Eastern European Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry being a carrier 16 History editCanavan disease was first described in 1931 by Myrtelle Canavan 17 In 1931 she co wrote a paper discussing the case of a child who had died at 16 months old and whose brain had a spongy white section Canavan was the first to identify this degenerative disorder of the central nervous system which was later named Canavan disease 18 Lawsuit edit Main article Greenberg v Miami Children s Hospital Research Institute The discovery of the gene for Canavan disease and subsequent events generated considerable controversy In 1987 the Greenbergs a family with two children affected by Canavan disease donated tissue samples to Reuben Matalon a researcher at the University of Chicago who was looking for the Canavan gene He successfully identified the gene in 1993 and developed a test for it that would enable antenatal before birth counseling of couples at risk of having a child with the disease 19 For a while the Canavan Foundation offered free genetic testing using Matalon s test 20 However in 1997 after he relocated to Florida Matalon s new employer Miami Children s Hospital patented the gene and started claiming royalties on the genetic test forcing the Canavan Foundation to withdraw their free testing A subsequent lawsuit brought by the Canavan Foundation against Miami Children s Hospital was resolved with a sealed out of court settlement 21 The case is sometimes cited in arguments about the appropriateness of patenting genes citation needed Research editResearch involving triacetin supplementation has shown promise in a rat model 22 Triacetin which can be enzymatically cleaved to form acetate enters the brain more readily than the negatively charged acetate The defective enzyme in Canavan disease aspartoacylase converts N acetylaspartate into aspartate and acetate Mutations in the gene for aspartoacylase prevent the breakdown of N acetylaspartate and reduce brain acetate availability during brain development Acetate supplementation using triacetin is meant to provide the missing acetate so brain development can continue normally citation needed A team of researchers headed by Paola Leone at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey has tried a procedure involving the insertion of six catheters into the brain that deliver a solution containing 600 to 900 billion engineered virus particles The virus a modified version of adeno associated virus is designed to replace the aspartoacylase enzyme 12 Children treated with this procedure to date have shown marked improvements including the growth of myelin with decreased levels of the N acetylaspartate toxin 23 A team of researchers of University of Massachusetts Medical School is working on developing rAAV based and optimized gene replacement therapy that would travel across the blood brain barrier 24 25 Researchers discovered the first drug like inhibitors of N acetyltransferase 26 See also editThe Myelin Project The Stennis Foundation Fern KupferReferences edit Namboodiri Am Peethambaran A Mathew R Sambhu Pa Hershfield J Moffett Jr Madhavarao Cn June 2006 Canavan disease and the role of N acetylaspartate in myelin synthesis Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 252 1 2 216 23 doi 10 1016 j mce 2006 03 016 PMID 16647192 S2CID 12255670 Bokhari Maria R Debopam Samanta Bokhari Syed Rizwan A July 6 2020 StatPearls National Center for Biotechnology Information Archived from the original on 2021 06 10 Retrieved 2021 04 06 Canavan Disease NORD National Organization for Rare Disorders Retrieved 2021 04 06 a b c Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man OMIM 271900 Reference Genetics Home Canavan disease Genetics Home Reference Retrieved 2017 06 14 a b Ph D Evelyn B Kelly 2013 01 07 Encyclopedia of Human Genetics and Disease 2 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 38714 2 Screening Canavan Foundation www canavanfoundation org Retrieved 2021 08 13 MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia 2019 Myelin In Medlineplus gov Retrieved June 26 2021 https medlineplus gov ency article 002261 htm Matalon Reuben Delgado Lisvania Michals Matalon Kimberlee 1993 Adam Margaret P Ardinger Holly H Pagon Roberta A Wallace Stephanie E eds Canavan Disease GeneReviews Seattle WA University of Washington Seattle PMID 20301412 retrieved 2021 09 10 Canavan disease Spongy degeneration of the central nervous system NCATS program Genetic and rare diseases information center Retrieved 17 April 2018 Assadi M Janson C Wang D J Goldfarb O Suri N Bilaniuk L Leone P Jul 2010 Lithium citrate reduces excessive intra cerebral N acetyl aspartate in Canavan disease European Journal of Paediatric Neurology 14 4 354 359 doi 10 1016 j ejpn 2009 11 006 PMID 20034825 a b Janson Christopher McPhee Scott Bilaniuk Larissa Haselgrove John Testaiuti Mark Freese Andrew Wang Dah Jyuu Shera David Hurh Peter Rupin Joan Saslow Elizabeth Goldfarb Olga Goldberg Michael Larijani Ghassem Sharrar William Liouterman Larisa Camp Angelique Kolodny Edwin Samulski Jude Leone Paola 20 July 2002 Clinical protocol Gene Therapy of Canavan Disease AAV 2 Vector for Neurosurgical Delivery of Aspartoacylase Gene ASPA to the Human Brain Human Gene Therapy 13 11 1391 1412 doi 10 1089 104303402760128612 PMID 12162821 S2CID 21318465 Leone P Shera D McPhee S W J Francis J S Kolodny E H Bilaniuk L T Wang D J Assadi M Goldfarb O Goldman H W Freese A Young D During M J Samulski R J Janson C G 19 December 2012 Long Term Follow Up After Gene Therapy for Canavan Disease Science Translational Medicine 4 165 165ra163 doi 10 1126 scitranslmed 3003454 PMC 3794457 PMID 23253610 Canavan disease Genetics Home Reference Retrieved 10 May 2020 Canavan Disease NORD National Organization for Rare Disorders NORD National Organization for Rare Disorders Retrieved 2017 06 14 Am I At Risk Canavan Foundation www canavanfoundation org Retrieved 2021 03 30 Canavan MM 1931 Schilder s Encephalitis Periaxialis Diffusa Report of a Case in a Child Aged Sixteen and One Half Months Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry 25 2 299 308 doi 10 1001 archneurpsyc 1931 02230020085005 Dr Myrtelle May Canavan National Library of Medicine Changing the Face of Medicine Physicians Accessed July 21 2009 Matalon R 1997 Canavan disease diagnosis and molecular analysis Genetic Testing 1 1 21 5 doi 10 1089 gte 1997 1 21 PMID 10464621 Families Sue Over Gene Study of Canavan Disease Los Angeles Times November 19 2000 Retrieved January 28 2024 Colaianni A Chandrasekharan S Cook Deegan R April 2010 Impact of gene patents and licensing practices on access to genetic testing and carrier screening for Tay Sachs and Canavan disease Genetics in Medicine 12 4 Suppl S5 S14 doi 10 1097 gim 0b013e3181d5a669 PMC 3042321 PMID 20393311 Mathew R Arun P Madhavarao CN Moffett JR Namboodiri MA 2010 Metabolic acetate therapy improves phenotype in the tremor rat model of Canavan disease J Inherit Metab Dis 33 3 195 210 doi 10 1007 s10545 010 9100 z PMC 2877317 PMID 20464498 Our Story The Search for a Cure Canavan Research Foundation Retrieved Nov 22 2010 permanent dead link Slow March Toward a Canavan Cure The Scientist Magazine Gessler D J Li D Xu H Su Q Sanmiguel J Tuncer S Moore C King J Matalon R Gao G 2017 Redirecting N acetylaspartate metabolism in the central nervous system normalizes myelination and rescues Canavan disease JCI Insight 2 3 e90807 doi 10 1172 jci insight 90807 PMC 5291725 PMID 28194442 Stecula A Hussain M Viola RE 2020 Discovery of Novel Inhibitors of a Critical Brain Enzyme Using a Homology Model and a Deep Convolutional Neural Network J Med Chem 63 16 8867 8875 doi 10 1021 acs jmedchem 0c00473 PMID 32787146 S2CID 221123632 External links editInformation on the disorder from the National Institute of Neurological Disorder and Stroke GeneReviews NCBI UW NIH entry on Canavan disease Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canavan disease amp oldid 1204711221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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