home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1147>
- <title>
- Mar. 15, 1993: Happy Birthday, Double Helix
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 56
- Happy Birthday, Double Helix
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Forty years after their discovery of DNA's secret, Watson and
- Crick celebrate its impact on the world
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff/Cold Spring Harbor--With reporting by Larry
- Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It was a night to celebrate. Raising their glasses in the
- Eagle, a pub near the campus of Cambridge University in
- England, a euphoric Francis Crick, 36, and James Watson, 24,
- drank to what they had just accomplished. Over the hubbub in the
- crowded pub, Crick's voice boomed out, "We have discovered the
- secret of life!"
- </p>
- <p> Indeed they had. The year was 1953, and that afternoon in
- the university's Cavendish Laboratory, the two brash
- overachievers had at last solved a puzzle that had for years
- stymied scientists seeking to understand how traits are passed
- from one generation to the next. By finally discerning the
- double-helix structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the
- giant molecule of heredity, they had cleared the way for a great
- leap forward in human understanding of the processes of life.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Watson and Crick were euphoric again as they
- gathered with a brilliant galaxy of scientists, biotech
- executives and other friends to celebrate the 40th anniversary
- of the discovery that opened a new era. The site was the
- century-old Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on New York's Long
- Island, where Watson, host of the glittering symposium, has
- served as director for 25 years. The appearance of the
- reclusive Crick helped highlight the event; he seldom ventures
- forth from California's Salk Institute for Biological Studies,
- where for the past 17 years he has been studying the brain. "Jim
- is an administrator and manager," Crick explains. "I'm still
- caught up in research."
- </p>
- <p> The setting could not have been more appropriate.
- Representations of the fabled molecule abound at the
- campus-like laboratory, which Watson calls "the University of
- DNA." Twisted, twin-strand, DNA-like designs border the ceiling
- of the auditorium and circle the lab's ubiquitous CSH insignia.
- A delicate steel model of the molecule sits in the auditorium
- lobby, and a DNA rendering hangs from the wall behind Watson's
- desk. The laboratory's lofty bell tower is not exempt. Each of
- its four sides is labeled with a letter representing one of the
- four nucleotides that constitute DNA's code letters: A, T, C
- and G. And visible through arches in each of the tower sides is
- a central staircase--spiral, of course. As an added touch,
- Watson and several of his guests who had investigated DNA's
- handmaiden, RNA, in the later 1950s wore their RNA Tie Club
- ties, each bearing the image of the single-strand molecule.
- </p>
- <p> DNA was also very much on the minds of the scheduled
- speakers as they described the events flowing from the
- Nobel-prizewinning Watson-Crick discovery. In the four decades
- since, scientists, building on their knowledge of DNA's
- structure, cracked the genetic code, described the machinery of
- the living cell, identified and located specific genes and
- learned to transfer them from one organism to another. Their
- work has already transformed biology, created the biotech
- industry and new pharmaceuticals, is beginning to affect
- business, industry, agriculture and food processing, and
- promises to change drastically the way medicine is practiced.
- "In five years the impact on medicine will be big," predicts
- Crick. "In 10 or 15 years, it will be overwhelming."
- </p>
- <p> Key to the rapid progress in genetics is the 15-year, $3
- billion Human Genome Project, which Watson headed from its
- beginning in 1990 until he left last April over differences
- with Dr. Bernadine Healy, the director of the National
- Institutes of Health (NIH). The ambitious project, which Watson
- helped persuade Congress to fund, has as its goal the discovery
- and mapping of all the estimated 100,000 human genes and the
- sequencing, or arranging in order, of all 3 billion chemical
- code letters in the human genome, the long strands of DNA that
- make up the chromosomes in the nucleus of each* of the body's 10
- trillion cells.
- </p>
- <p> The genome is in effect a blueprint for the complete human
- being, containing instructions that not only determine the
- structure, size, coloring and other physical attributes, but
- can also affect susceptibility to disease, intelligence and
- even behavior. "We used to think that our fate was in our
- stars," says Watson. "Now we know, in large part, that our fate
- is in our genes."
- </p>
- <p> Scientists funded by the genome proj ect have their work cut
- out for them. As of last week, only about 6,100 human genes had
- been identified, and only a tiny fraction of the genome
- sequenced. But the rate of discovery is picking up.
- </p>
- <p> Even as the gala event at Cold Spring Harbor was proceeding,
- news came that a collaborative group of scientists from 13
- institutions had identified the gene that, when faulty, is
- responsible for at least some cases of amyotrophic lateral
- sclerosis, or ALS, the untreatable degenerative nerve disorder
- that crippled and eventually killed Lou Gehrig, the New York
- Yankee first baseman. Victims of "Lou Gehrig's disease" usually
- die because of fast-spreading paralysis in as little as three to
- five years. A small percentage of ALS sufferers, including famed
- British physicist Stephen Hawking, manage to survive for
- decades, mentally alert but trapped in a completely immobilized
- body. The new finding, reported in the journal Nature, could
- someday result in treatment and perhaps even prevention of the
- disease.
- </p>
- <p> Only a week earlier, in another Nature report, scientists
- revealed that they had found the gene that appears to cause
- X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, or ALD, the rare degenerative
- disease depicted in the movie Lorenzo's Oil. Other researchers
- have just discovered that at least 23 different mutations in a
- single gene can lead to the development of type II (adult)
- diabetes.
- </p>
- <p> The identification of disease genes has already resulted in
- the development of tests for such disorders as cystic fibrosis
- and muscular dystrophy; people from families with histories of
- these diseases can now be tested for the faulty gene long
- before any symptoms show up. But little testing has been done
- so far because the diseases are relatively rare and the results
- are merely informative; no cure is yet available, and if the
- test is positive, there is little action the recipient can
- take, except to avoid having children, who might inherit the
- gene.
- </p>
- <p> "That kind of diagnosis does not influence the present
- generation, except in an indirect fashion," says Walter
- Gilbert, a Harvard molecular biologist who spoke at the Cold
- Spring Harbor meeting. But Gilbert, awarded a Nobel Prize for
- his method of sequencing DNA, foresees more massive screening
- as tests become available for genes that simply predispose
- people--that is, make them susceptible--to more common
- illnesses such as heart disease and cancer. In these cases, he
- believes, people will seek out the tests because they will have
- some control over their fate. Depending on their genetic
- susceptibility, they can watch their diets, exercise, have
- frequent checkups, avoid the sun or practice other forms of
- behavior that may ward off the onset of disease.
- </p>
- <p> The first genes of this kind will be diagnosed as early as
- 1995, Gilbert predicts. Then, "by the year 2000 we will have
- genetic profiles, with 20 to 50 disease genes identified on
- them." Ten years later, genetic profiles will display between
- 2,000 and 5,000 potential disease genes, he says, "and by 2020
- or 2030, you'll be able to go to a drugstore and get your own
- DNA sequence on a CD, which you can then analyze at home on
- your Macintosh."
- </p>
- <p> By that time, Gilbert believes, genetic testing will be
- commonplace and medicine will have drastically changed. Instead
- of emphasizing treatment with surgery or drugs, it will have
- become largely predictive and preventive.
- </p>
- <p> Yet medicine of the future will undoubtedly be complemented
- by a technique that is still in its infancy, but suddenly shows
- signs of taking off: gene therapy, which, simply stated,
- involves the transfer of beneficial genes into the human body.
- </p>
- <p> Encouraged by the apparent success of the first approved use
- of the procedure--on two young girls being treated for an
- immune-deficiency disease--the NIH and biotech companies have
- begun channeling funds to medical researchers eager to apply
- variations of gene therapy to a host of diseases.
- </p>
- <p> "The number of investigators getting involved has mushroomed
- over the past year," says Dr. W. French Anderson, a molecular
- biologist at the University of Southern California and a
- pioneering advocate of gene therapy. At Cold Spring Harbor last
- week, he reported that the number of approved trials of gene
- therapy, designed to treat diseases ranging from cystic fibrosis
- to cancer to AIDS, has now reached 47, involving 92 patients.
- </p>
- <p> It was Anderson who took gene therapy out of the realm of
- science fiction when he got approval for the transfer of a
- beneficial gene into a sickly five-year-old Ohio girl who
- suffered from an immune deficiency. Because of a faulty gene,
- her body could not manufacture an enzyme called adenosine
- deaminase (ADA). Without it, toxic substances accumulated in
- her bloodstream and destroyed the white cells, specifically T
- cells, inactivating her immune system and making her, like AIDS
- victims, vulnerable to many diseases.
- </p>
- <p> Anderson, then at the NIH, with colleagues Dr. R. Michael
- Blaese and Dr. Kenneth Culver, extracted T cells from the
- little girl's blood and exposed them to a mouse-leukemia
- retrovirus that had been rendered harmless and endowed with a
- normal ADA gene. Invading the T cell, the retrovirus acted as
- a vector, depositing its genetic material, including the ADA
- gene, in the cell nucleus. After the re-engineered T cells were
- cultured, a process that produced billions of them, they were
- infused back into the child's bloodstream, where their new gene
- began producing the ADA enzyme.
- </p>
- <p> Now, 2 1/2 years after that historic experiment, Anderson
- reported to the Cold Spring Harbor symposium, both this child
- and another young Ohio girl who began the same treatment a few
- months later have acceptable levels of the ADA enzyme and are
- leading normal, healthy lives, needing only to return every six
- months for repeat treatments. This study, and one conducted by
- the University of Michigan's Dr. James Wilson on a woman with
- familial hypercholesterolemia, represent the only gene-therapy
- treatments to date with beneficial results. But Anderson
- expects more success from other projects getting under way.
- </p>
- <p> "Short term," he says, "I think that gene therapy will be
- applied to a broader and broader range of diseases, with more
- and more clever approaches." He points to one brain-cancer
- trial that received initial approval just last week. Researchers
- will splice a herpes simplex gene into a mouse-leukemia virus
- that has been rendered harmless by genetic engineering, and
- insert the altered virus directly into the brain tumor. The
- virus, as is its nature, will promptly invade the nucleus of the
- tumor cells, endowing them with the herpes gene and making them
- susceptible to ganciclovir, an anti-herpes drug. The patient
- will then be given the drug, which should kill both the virus
- and the tumor cells.
- </p>
- <p> Another, more startling strategy, not yet approved, would
- use the AIDS virus itself as a vector to deliver antiviral genes
- to white blood cells infected with the AIDS virus. After
- incapacitating the virus so that it cannot reproduce and
- splicing a therapeutic gene into its genetic material,
- researchers would inject it into an AIDS patient's bloodstream.
- It could be the ideal vector for treating the disease, zeroing
- in on the T cells normally infected by the AIDS virus.
- </p>
- <p> Other methods are more straightforward. In a forthcoming
- cystic fibrosis trial, Anderson says, doctors will simply
- "infuse the vector right down into the lungs. And there are
- even enemas of vectors for colon cancer."
- </p>
- <p> Eventually, Anderson told his fellow Cold Spring Harbor
- celebrators, he looks to the day when "any physician can take a
- vial off a shelf and inject an appropriate gene into a patient."
- </p>
- <p> Like the others gathered to mark the anniversary, Anderson
- paid tribute to Watson and Crick, whose accomplishment made all
- that followed possible. Watson was equally appreciative. "I just
- wish to thank everyone for being here," he said, "to help
- Francis and me celebrate what was really a very wonderful
- birthday party."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-