Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine (Dec 2019)

The CLN3 gene and protein: What we know

  • Myriam Mirza,
  • Anna Vainshtein,
  • Alberto DiRonza,
  • Uma Chandrachud,
  • Luke J. Haslett,
  • Michela Palmieri,
  • Stephan Storch,
  • Janos Groh,
  • Niv Dobzinski,
  • Gennaro Napolitano,
  • Carolin Schmidtke,
  • Danielle M. Kerkovich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.859
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 12
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background One of the most important steps taken by Beyond Batten Disease Foundation in our quest to cure juvenile Batten (CLN3) disease is to understand the State of the Science. We believe that a strong understanding of where we are in our experimental understanding of the CLN3 gene, its regulation, gene product, protein structure, tissue distribution, biomarker use, and pathological responses to its deficiency, lays the groundwork for determining therapeutic action plans. Objectives To present an unbiased comprehensive reference tool of the experimental understanding of the CLN3 gene and gene product of the same name. Methods BBDF compiled all of the available CLN3 gene and protein data from biological databases, repositories of federally and privately funded projects, patent and trademark offices, science and technology journals, industrial drug and pipeline reports as well as clinical trial reports and with painstaking precision, validated the information together with experts in Batten disease, lysosomal storage disease, lysosome/endosome biology. Results The finished product is an indexed review of the CLN3 gene and protein which is not limited in page size or number of references, references all available primary experiments, and does not draw conclusions for the reader. Conclusions Revisiting the experimental history of a target gene and its product ensures that inaccuracies and contradictions come to light, long‐held beliefs and assumptions continue to be challenged, and information that was previously deemed inconsequential gets a second look. Compiling the information into one manuscript with all appropriate primary references provides quick clues to which studies have been completed under which conditions and what information has been reported. This compendium does not seek to replace original articles or subtopic reviews but provides an historical roadmap to completed works.

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