KRAS Pathway / MAPK/ERK Signaling Pathway
First: What Even Is a "Pathway"?Cells aren't just blobs of jelly. They're incredibly organized — like a giant office building where every department needs to know what to do, when to do it, and who's ...
Plain-English explanations of MEF2C research terms, concepts, and scientific mechanisms.
First: What Even Is a "Pathway"?Cells aren't just blobs of jelly. They're incredibly organized — like a giant office building where every department needs to know what to do, when to do it, and who's ...
**What it means:** MEF2Cast is a podcast produced by the MEF2C community (particularly the US Foundation) that features interviews with researchers, families, and advocates. It serves as both an educa...
**What it means:** Creating isogenic cell lines means taking one starting cell line and editing it so that one version has the mutation (MEF2C knockout) and the other doesn't (wild-type control). They...
**What it means:** "Preclinical" means research done **before human trials begin** — in cell cultures (in vitro) and animal models (in vivo). A "preclinical update" means the researchers have complete...
What it means: CRISPR is a gene-editing tool that acts like molecular "scissors". It can find a specific DNA sequence and cut it, allowing researchers to delete, replace, or modify genes with extreme ...
**What it means:** Think of the PCT as a "global patent application portal." Instead of filing separate patents in 100+ countries individually, inventors file **one application** that reserves their p...
**What it means:** The WO2026039331 patent published through WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) covers the viral gene therapy approach for MEF2C. "WO" indicates a Patent Cooperation Treat...
MicroRNAs are tiny RNA molecules (about 22 nucleotides long) that regulate gene expression after transcription. They can bind to mRNA molecules and either block them from being translated into protein...
**What it means:** The MEF2C gene is relatively large — about 12-13 kilobases (kb) of DNA. But the AAV vector can only carry about 4.7 kb of genetic material. So the UT Southwestern team had to "shrin...
**What it means:** The MUSC team evaluated multiple approaches (gene therapy, micro-RNA therapeutics) and chose the RNA-based approach because it "offered several advantages." These likely include: - ...
**What it means:** The fact that seven AAV-based gene therapies have received FDA approval provides a regulatory pathway that the MEF2C gene therapy team can follow. FDA has extensive experience revie...
**What it means:** Synthetic biology is the field of engineering biological components and systems that don't exist in nature. In gene therapy, this includes designing custom viral vectors, optimizing...
**What it means:** RNA is the molecular "messenger" that carries instructions from DNA to the protein-making machinery of the cell. RNA therapeutics work by modifying this messaging process. For MHS, ...
**What it means:** AAV is a tiny, harmless virus used as a **delivery vehicle** (vector) to carry therapeutic genes into cells. Think of it like a Trojan horse — the virus looks normal from the outsid...
**What it means:** A retrospective study looks **backward in time** at existing data — reviewing past patient records, genetic test results, and clinical outcomes to find patterns. It's less rigorous ...
**What it means:** In gene therapy, an "expression cassette" is the **complete package of genetic instructions** packed into the viral vector. It's not just the MEF2C gene itself — it also includes: -...
**What it means:** "Het" is shorthand for "heterozygous." So Mef2c-Het means mice that have one normal copy of the mouse version of the MEF2C gene (Mef2c, lowercase in mice) and one broken copy. This ...
**What it means:** PSD-95 (encoded by the DLG4 gene) is a **scaffolding protein** located at the synapse. It acts like the structural framework of a building, holding receptors, signaling molecules, a...
**What it means:** Base editing is a precise gene-editing technique that changes a single DNA letter (like turning an A into a G) without cutting both strands of the DNA helix (which is how traditiona...
**What it means:** "Isogenic" cells are cells that are **genetically identical except for one specific difference** — like twin siblings where one has a targeted mutation and the other doesn't. Resear...
**What it means:** iPSCs are adult cells (like skin cells) that have been **reprogrammed** back to an embryonic-like state — they can become any cell type in the body. It's like hitting the "reset but...
**What it means:** The retina (the light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye) was actually the **first tissue** where gene therapy succeeded (Luxturna, 2017). The eye is "immune-privileged" — meani...
**What it means:** NEDHSIL is the **alternative name** for MEF2C-associated syndrome. It describes the core clinical features without naming the gene. You might see it in older papers or clinical note...
**What it means:** Synthetic lethality occurs when a cell survives with just ONE gene broken but dies if a SECOND gene is also broken. Cancer drugs exploit this by killing cancer cells (which already ...
**What it means:** Epigenetics is the study of changes in gene **activity** that don't involve changes to the DNA sequence itself. Think of your DNA as a piano — the keys (genes) are always there. Epi...
**What it means:** AAV isn't a single virus — it's a family of related viruses, each called a **serotype**. Different serotypes have different **tissue preferences** — some are better at reaching the ...
**What it means:** Imagine your DNA is a library of instruction manuals (genes). A transcription factor is like a **foreman** who walks through the library, finds the right manual, and tells the worke...