Cure LBSL

Cure LBSL What is LBSL? LBSL stands for Leukoencephalopathy with Brainstem and Spinal Cord Involvement and Lactate Elevation. What are the symptoms of LBSL?
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Cure LBSL, formerly known as A Cure for Ellie, is on a mission to support patients, raise awareness and find a cure for leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation (LBSL). LBSL is also known as the “Awesome Disease” because those battling this condition tend to be truly remarkable people. LBSL is a rare genetic disorder that affects the brain and spinal cor

d. The exact number of people with this condition is unknown, and many may go undiagnosed, but based on reported cases, there are approximately 100 known patients worldwide. First identified in 2004, LBSL is caused by mutations in the DARS2 gene, which provides the body with instructions for making an enzyme called mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase. This enzyme is important for production of proteins in the mitochondria – the energy factories of our cells, which turn nutrients into energy. As a result of mutations in DARS2, certain parts of nervous system do not have sufficient energy to function properly affecting their function and the production of myelin. Much like the plastic coating around the wires in your home, myelin provides insulation to the nervous system and is essential for the transmission of signals from the brain to the rest of the body. More commonly known myelin disorders are Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and Parkinson’s disease. According to the National Institutes of Health, most LBSL patients develop movement problems during childhood or adolescence. However, in some individuals, these problems do not develop until adulthood. Known symptoms include:

• Abnormal muscle stiffness and difficulty coordinating movements.
• Loss of the ability to sense the position of their limbs and vibrations
• Most individuals who show symptoms in childhood eventually require wheelchair assistance, sometimes as early as their teens, although the age varies.
• People with LBSL can have other signs and symptoms of the condition, such as seizures, speech difficulties, hand tremors, learning problems, or mild deterioration of mental functioning.
• Some people with this disorder are particularly vulnerable to severe complications following head trauma, which may trigger a loss of consciousness, other reversible neurological problems, or fever. How is LBSL diagnosed? LBSL is often first identified through MRI with contrast. Genetic testing is required to identify the DARS2 genetic mutation and confirm diagnosis. LBSL is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner, meaning most patients have inherited two copies of the mutated gene – one from each parent. Parents who are both carries of the DARS2 mutation have a 25% chance of having a child with LBSL. Are there any treatments for LBSL? Unfortunately, there are currently no definitive, long-term treatments for LBSL. The good news, however, is that research into LBSL is currently underway at the Kennedy Krieger Institute’s Moser Center for Leukodystrophies in Baltimore, Maryland. Launched in 2016, the project aims to develop novel new drug therapies for the treatment and hopefully cure LBSL. Supportive therapies for LBSL patients include:

• Physical therapy and rehabilitation to improve motor function
• Antiepileptic drugs (AED)
• Special education
• Speech therapy

Some patients with LBSL take a combination of anti-oxidants, often referred to as a mitochondrial cocktail, under the guidance of a doctor in an effort to try to help energy production in the brain and spinal cord. While, the use of these anti-oxidants has not been systematically studied, and it is uncertain if their use will improve the long-term outcome of LBSL, some patients and families attribute positive results to the cocktail. Finding a Cure

While there is no cure for LBSL, Ellie’s friends and family are not without hope. They support ongoing research at the Kennedy Krieger Institute that, with God’s help, may one day lead to a breakthrough and eventually a cure for LBSL and other types of childhood Leukodystrophies.

This Mother’s Day, we want to shout out to the rare disease moms.  To the ones who sought answers and then had to endure...
05/10/2026

This Mother’s Day, we want to shout out to the rare disease moms.

To the ones who sought answers and then had to endure the pain of hearing the diagnosis.

To the ones who became self-taught geneticists and rare disease experts through countless late nights of research.

To the ones whose Google search history would make their doctors both impressed and mildly concerned.

To the ones who advocate tirelessly, even at the risk of being “that mom.”

To the ones who spend so many hours on hold with their insurance companies, they have memorized the hold music.

To the ones who drive to so many doctor appointments that their car tires see more action than an Uber driver’s.

To the ones who carry the weight of the unknown but march on in hope.

To the ones who smile and nod when some well-meaning person starts a sentence with “Have you tried…”

To the ones whose hearts break each time the latest sign of disease progression emerges.

To the ones who smile and shrug when the world says, “We just don’t know how you do it!” because you don’t know, either, to be honest.

To the ones who mastered saying the tongue-twisting name of their or their child’s rare disease 10 times fast.

To the ones who hold it together when everyone around them is falling apart.

To the ones who sometimes really need a break, but power through anyway.

To the ones who found their tribe in a rare disease community they never imagined they would join.

To the ones whose family and friends and neighbors (and strangers!) rally around them and support their mission to find a cure.

Happy Mother’s Day, rare disease moms. You are incredible, and incredibly cherished.

🧬 THROWBACK THURSDAY 🧬Some of our Kennedy Krieger researchers and Cure LBSL team met up in Baltimore for the American So...
05/07/2026

🧬 THROWBACK THURSDAY 🧬

Some of our Kennedy Krieger researchers and Cure LBSL team met up in Baltimore for the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy's annual meeting in 2024, which unites scientists from around the world who are working to make gene therapy a reality for patients like ours.

Next week, our researchers from Kennedy Krieger are heading to ASGCT's annual meeting in Boston to give a talk on the LBSL gene therapy in development. We're cheering them on every step of the way!

✨ WEAR YOUR WHY ✨ Grab your Cure LBSL swag in our online store today! Browse the collection: www.bonfire.com/cure-lbsl
04/30/2026

✨ WEAR YOUR WHY ✨

Grab your Cure LBSL swag in our online store today! Browse the collection: www.bonfire.com/cure-lbsl

🎾 GET READY! 🎾 The secret is out: We are thrilled to host Hit for Hope, our first LBSL tennis and pickleball tournament,...
04/24/2026

🎾 GET READY! 🎾

The secret is out: We are thrilled to host Hit for Hope, our first LBSL tennis and pickleball tournament, in Northern Virginia on Sunday, Sept. 27! We'd love to have you join us for an incredible, impactful and fun day to raise awareness and funds for LBSL research.

How you can support Hit for Hope:
1️⃣ Register your pickleball or tennis team, and rally your friends!
2️⃣ New to tennis or pickleball? We're hosting clinics on site to tune up skills!
3️⃣ Sponsor the event, or share with a business that would love to support our cause!
4️⃣ Can't be there in person? That's okay, you can still buy a yard sign to cheer on players and support the LBSL community!

✨Grab tickets, sponsorships and yard signs (and learn more) at givebutter.com/hit-for-hope — we can't wait to see you there!

💚 WE ARE SO GRATEFUL 💚 April is National Volunteer Month, and today, we're thanking Beth Gulugian, who has served as Cur...
04/22/2026

💚 WE ARE SO GRATEFUL 💚

April is National Volunteer Month, and today, we're thanking Beth Gulugian, who has served as Cure LBSL's board chair for more than a decade!

✨While you might not have met Beth, she has been a steady force behind the scenes here from the very beginning. Her enduring dedication to our mission stems from her deep friendship with our co-founders Beth and Mike McGinn and her love for their daughter Ellie, whose LBSL diagnosis set things in motion to create this foundation in 2013.

She has poured countless hours into this foundation, leading meetings, providing constant support and insight, and is spearheading a major fundraising and awareness event for Cure LBSL this year! Cure LBSL is stronger because of her.

✨Thank you, Beth, for all that you've done for Cure LBSL and all the work you continue to do!

👇Drop her a little love in the comments!

✨PATIENT SPOTLIGHT✨As a little girl in Brazil, it took Alice a long time to learn to walk. Once she finally did, she fel...
04/20/2026

✨PATIENT SPOTLIGHT✨

As a little girl in Brazil, it took Alice a long time to learn to walk. Once she finally did, she fell often and struggled with coordination. At age 4, genetic testing revealed Alice has LBSL.

Now a teen, she is a young lady with a big smile who loves spending time with her friends and family and learning new things.

She uses a wheelchair, and she stays plenty busy with school and lots of therapies. Living with LBSL is a challenge every day, but her dad says that Alice finds joy in overcoming her challenges.

“We must always have hope that one day we will have a cure, a more targeted treatment for LBSL!” her dad says.

👇Send Alice and her family some love and support from across the world in the comments! 💚

We are grateful for the MINI team at NIH! If you look closely at this abstract, you'll see a DARS2 patient is mentioned ...
04/19/2026

We are grateful for the MINI team at NIH! If you look closely at this abstract, you'll see a DARS2 patient is mentioned -- researchers are continuing to learn so much about LBSL and mitochondrial disease in general!

(Interested in learning more about the MINI study opportunity? Check it out here! https://www.genome.gov/Current-NHGRI-Clinical-Studies/Metabolism-Infection-Immunity-Study-MINI )

So many of our ARS families have stepped up in an incredible way by participating in the National Institutes of Health MINI Study—and this recently published eye movement research is a powerful example of why that participation matters.

The study takes a closer look at how eye movements can serve as measurable, objective markers of neurological function in individuals with mitochondrial disease, including those with ARS-related conditions. While it may seem like a small detail, eye movement is actually a highly precise window into how the brain is functioning. Subtle differences in tracking, coordination, and response times can reveal patterns that help researchers better understand disease progression.

What’s so important here is that these types of biomarkers—like eye movement data—can:
• Help define clinical endpoints for future trials
• Provide quantifiable ways to track disease over time
• Support earlier and more accurate diagnosis
• Ultimately accelerate the path toward treatments

This doesn’t happen without you. Every appointment, every test, every moment spent participating in studies like MINI contributes to something much bigger—a foundation of data that researchers can build on to move our entire community forward.

To our families: thank you for showing up, for saying yes, and for being such a critical part of advancing science. This is exactly how progress happens.

🧬 PROGRESS ON DISPLAY 🧬 Researcher Antonio Holmes discusses the DARS2-AAV9 gene therapy in development at a symposium at...
04/14/2026

🧬 PROGRESS ON DISPLAY 🧬

Researcher Antonio Holmes discusses the DARS2-AAV9 gene therapy in development at a symposium at Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore last week. In September, Kennedy Krieger researchers published a proof-of-concept paper in Annals of Neurology on the therapy because it’s been showing promising results in the lab!

💚 We love seeing our researchers sharing about their incredible work — work that YOU help fund!

⌛ OUR WHY ⌛Myelin, the insulating white matter of the brain and spinal cord, is essential for proper nerve function. But...
04/13/2026

⌛ OUR WHY ⌛

Myelin, the insulating white matter of the brain and spinal cord, is essential for proper nerve function. But we are racing against a cruel clock: LBSL is a progressive leukodystrophy, every minute that ticks by means myelin loss for the people who live with LBSL.

We are working so hard to find a cure!

💚 WE ARE SO THANKFUL 💚April is National Volunteer Month, and today, we’re thanking the inspiring, indomitable Beth McGin...
04/10/2026

💚 WE ARE SO THANKFUL 💚

April is National Volunteer Month, and today, we’re thanking the inspiring, indomitable Beth McGinn, the supermom who co-founded Cure LBSL!

✨ Since launching this foundation in 2013, Beth has selflessly and tirelessly volunteered thousands upon thousands of hours for our cause, finding researchers, advocating at the state and national level, fundraising millions of dollars, mobilizing volunteers, coordinating conferences, and knitting together an international community of patients and families — and that’s just a fraction of what she’s done for Cure LBSL.

✨ While she stepped down as our executive director last year, she has remained a constant and active member of Cure LBSL’s board. Without her, Cure LBSL wouldn’t be here!

✨ Thank you for all that you have done, Beth, and for all you continue to do!

Drop her a little love and gratitude in the comments! 👇

🔬READY, SET, FIRE! 🔬Researcher Madison Yorkowski monitors electrical activity, aka firing, in LBSL cells in the lab at K...
04/08/2026

🔬READY, SET, FIRE! 🔬

Researcher Madison Yorkowski monitors electrical activity, aka firing, in LBSL cells in the lab at Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore. These cells have been treated with an A*O therapy that is in development, and firing is a way to measure the cells' overall health.

🔎 How do they do it?
Scientists take LBSL patient stem cells derived from blood and differentiate them into neurons, or brain cells.

💚 Your support helps fund this critical research — donate at curelbsl.org!

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