In Vallabh’s case, the cause is genetic: After his mother’s death, he discovered he carried the same mutated gene that caused her disease, meaning he would definitely develop it.
“Age of onset is extremely unpredictable,” Vallabh said. “Age of onset in parents doesn’t really predict anything.”
Dr. Vallabh and Dr. Minikel reached out to colleagues at the Whitehead Institute, a biomedical research institute next door to the Broad Institute, to collaborate on a new gene-editing approach to erase the gene that caused Dr. Vallabh’s disease. The technique, developed by Whitehead scientists, is called CHARM, or histone end-binding methyltransferase autoinhibitory release.
While previous gene-editing tools have been described as like scissors or an eraser, Musnuru calls CHARM a volume control, allowing scientists to tweak genes. He says CHARM has three advantages over previous methods: