| |
 |
| |
|
| |
Great news: Alan Peaford and his daughter,
Victoria |
| |
|
It was just before Christmas when the message that
I had dreamed of for more than 15 years popped up
on my screen.
It was from Professor Laird Jackson, the first
doctor since
Dr de Lange herself, to take a serious interest
in CdLS. Laird began looking at the cause of the
syndrome when he first met CdLS kids in the late
1970s, and headed up the first real research at
Thomas Jefferson in Philadelphia.
His email was as laid back as ever, “ok,
we’ve got it!” he said and went on
to explain in confidence, how his protégé
Dr Ian Kranz - now working at the Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) - had found the
gene. “We have definitive mutations in four
very different children and the parents in each
case do not have the mutation, confirming that
this occurs sporadically most of the time,”
he wrote.
Laird, as part of the “open sharing”
agreement with Newcastle University left a message
for Professor Tom Strachan to get him to call.
Strachan, who was away in London, returned to
the International Centre for Life laboratories
the following day to get the message …and
also to be met by a very excited Dr Emma Tonkin
who had received results back from their DNA screening
which confirmed they too had found a mutation.
Both laboratories had the same mutation on chromosome
five.
Over the next four months, both labs worked
hard to “prove” the mutation and submit
their respective scientific papers to Nature Genetics,
the US-based international focal point for genetic
research. On May 16th at 1pm New York time (6pm
in London) the veil of secrecy was finally lifted.
CdLS UK families were at Stratford when the
news could be given.
There was an audible gasp from the floor when
I was able to share this news that we have all
been waiting for and I was glad that Emma Tonkin
was there to hear the genuine delight for herself.
This is a major breakthrough for the Foundation.
It has been like a quest for a Holy Grail for
many of us involved with the syndrome for many
years.
I would like to acknowledge the gratitude of
all of the families, carers, friends and other
professionals to the scientists in Philadelphia
and in Newcastle for not giving up when they could
have done. To doctors like Laird Jackson and Maggie
Ireland who really fired the enthusiasm for the
research; and in the UK and Ireland we acknowledge
with grateful thanks the role of The Community
Fund who directed a lottery grant to Newcastle
so that the research could continue.
We had the optimism and dashed hopes before,
but this time it is for real.
In this issue we look at what it means for us
– and we will continue to report on developments
over the next few years. But for now, let’s
celebrate!
Alan Peaford
Chairman
CdLS World Federation |