Awarded Grants

Awarded Grants

MDBR, CLA, LGDALMI Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, CLA, LGDALMI Million Dollar Bike Ride

Identifying Unmet Care and Communication Needs of Families Affected by Complex Lymphatic Anomalies

Bryan Sisk

Washington University School of Medicine

$53,460

Awardee: Bryan Sisk

Institution: Washington University School of Medicine

Grant Amount: $53,460

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Complex lymphatic anomalies (CLAs) are a group of rare disorders associated with abnormal lymphatic development that arise in infants and children. These disorders can be disfiguring, painful, and even life-threatening. In our clinical experiences, families affected by CLAs have described multiple barriers to care and communication, such as difficulty accessing care from CLA experts, persistent uncertainty about the diagnosis and long-term consequences, insufficient information to guide decisions, and the necessity of persistent parental advocacy to ensure the child receives adequate medical care. However, no researchers have explored or categorized the needs or barriers experienced by these families. Without this critical information, we cannot provide guidance to clinicians, patients, parents, or advocacy groups on how to best support these families to overcome care and communication challenges. Furthermore, this foundational knowledge is necessary to support the development of interventions and systemic changes to improve care for these families. In this study, we will characterize the care and communication needs of families affected by CLAs and identify resources and coping strategies from the perspectives of parents using qualitative semi-structured interviews (Aim 1). We will also assess the psychosocial wellbeing of parents and the quality of communication using survey methodology (Aim 2). To disseminate findings and seek feedback from the CLA community (Aim 3), we will host separate interactive webinars with the Lymphangiomatosis and Gorham’s Disease Alliance (LGDA) and the Chan-Zuckerberg Institute (CZI) Lymphatic Researchers Network. These findings will be essential to improve care and ensure that scientific discoveries translate to actual clinical benefits for families affected by CLAs.

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MDBR, FOP Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, FOP Million Dollar Bike Ride

Novel, point of care biomarker to detect pre-clinical flares for people living with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP)

Nezihi Murat Karabacak

Massachusetts General Hospital

$64,000

Awardee: Nezihi Murat Karabacak

Institution: Massachusetts General Hospital

Grant Amount: $64,000

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) is a severely debilitating condition with no accurate and clinically applicable biomarkers or imaging approaches. Our overall goal is to develop a novel, non-invasive assay to detect the initiation and progression of FOP. We will define a series of novel blood-based biomarkers specific for monitoring heterotopic ossification predicated in people living with FOP. As a result, we will establish an innovative way to detect and evaluate progression and monitor treatment outcomes for this disease process.

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MDBR, MPS Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, MPS Million Dollar Bike Ride

Understanding the role of inflammation in MPSIIIA disease to identify therapeutic approaches for older patients without treatment options

Brian Bigger

University of Manchester

$64,015

Awardee: Brian Bigger

Institution: University of Manchester

Grant Amount: $64,015

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Many older patients with mucopolysaccharide diseases are ineligible for new treatment trials, and those with brain disease, such as type IIIA, have no current treatments available. To address this gap, we want to explore in the mouse model of MPSIIIA, the observed decline in cognition that follows repeated rounds of viral infection in patients and has been described in many dementias. Our aim is to first see if these effects can be recapitulated in the MPSIIIA mouse model, and later to develop novel immunotherapies to treat it. There are several drugs already available that may be re-purposable to this end, potentially offering rapid relief for MPS patients from behavioural and cognitive aspects of disease

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MDBR, MPS Gene Spotlight, MPS Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, MPS Gene Spotlight, MPS Million Dollar Bike Ride

CNS disease severity assessment with quantitative neuroimaging

Igor Nestrasil

University of Minnesota

$64,645

Awardee: Igor Nestrasil

Institution: University of Minnesota

Grant Amount: $64,645

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

This project aims to find the underpinnings of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) clinical/radiological severity in mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I) and relate these findings to quantitative MRI outcomes. These links may ease the process of the central nervous system (CNS) disease severity assessment in the clinical setting.

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MDBR, STXBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, STXBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride

Rescue of STXBP1 encephalopathies with small molecules in mouse models in vivo

Jacqueline Burré

Weill Medical College of Cornell University

$80,070

Awardee: Jacqueline Burré

Institution: Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Grant Amount: $80,070

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Mutations in STXBP1 lead to nerve cell dysfunction in the brain due to a reduction in functional STXBP1 amount. We had previously identified three small molecules (4-phenylbutyrate and two novel compounds) that restore nerve cell function in cultured mouse nerve cells and in live worm disease models. Yet, if and to what extent these small molecules revert the dysfunction in a brain remains unknown. Plus, it remains unclear if there is a critical period for when treatment needs to start, necessitating studies in a mouse model. We have established a mouse line with half of STXBP1 amount and are in the process of generating two additional mouse lines with missense mutations in STXBP1. We will use these mouse models of STXBP1 disorder to test the effect of our three small molecules in living animals. We will measure changes in seizure frequency, learning and memory, anxiety, hyperactivity and general movement, in addition to brain structure and development. To reveal if there is a critical period for when treatment needs to be started, we will determine the efficiency of the three small molecules in reversing the identified dysfunction when given to mice in utero, to newborn mice or to adolescent mice. Our study is significant because it further dissects the disease mechanism in a living animal, and because of its translational importance. Importantly, our studies will go hand-in-hand with the on-going 4-phenylbutyrate clinical trial at Weill Cornell Medicine, to achieve the most effect with the least amount of drug.

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MDBR, STXBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, STXBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride

A novel mouse model for developing therapeutic approaches of STXBP1 encephalopathy

Mingshan Xue

Baylor College of Medicine

$80,070

Awardee: Mingshan Xue

Institution: Baylor College of Medicine

Grant Amount: $80,070

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

STXBP1 encephalopathy is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder caused by heterozygous pathogenic variants in syntaxin-binding protein 1 (STXBP1). Both protein haploinsufficiency and dominant-negative mutations were identified as the disease mechanisms. Models of haploinsufficiency have been developed and validated and are currently being used to test potential disease-modifying therapies. However, dominant-negative mutations may require therapeutic approaches that are different from those for haploinsufficiency. Mammalian models carrying dominant-negative mutations are currently lacking. Thus, this project aims to develop and validate a new mouse model carrying a dominant-negative missense variant to fill this critical gap. This model will provide a new tool for preclinical evaluations of different therapies of STXBP1 encephalopathy and lead to a better understanding of the disease pathogenesis.

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MDBR, Castleman Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, Castleman Million Dollar Bike Ride

CXCL13 as a novel biomarker and therapeutic target in idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease

David Fajgenbaum

University of Pennsylvania

$64,205

Awardee: David Fajgenbaum

Institution: University of Pennsylvania

Grant Amount: $64,205

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease (iMCD) is a poorly understood disorder involving lymphoproliferation and multiple organ failure due to a cytokine storm often involving interleukin-6 (IL-6). Its causes, key immune cell types, signaling pathways, and cytokines involved in the disease are poorly understood. Diagnosis is challenging due to lack of a positive diagnostic biomarker and management is suboptimal due to a lack of indicators of response and novel therapeutic approaches. Annual US incidence is ~1000 individuals of all ages, and 5-year survival is estimated at 65-75%. Few treatment options exist beyond cytotoxic chemotherapies for the 50-66% of patients who do not respond to the only FDA-approved therapy, siltuximab, which blocks IL-6. Advances in discovering treatments, diagnostic biomarkers, and indicators of response to siltuximab are critically needed. We recently identified the chemokine CXCL13 as a potential, novel biomarker and therapeutic target in iMCD. CXCL13 is critical to maintaining lymph node morphology as well as developing appropriate adaptive immune responses, both of which are abnormal in iMCD. In a pilot study, we found that CXCL13 is the most elevated circulating cytokine in iMCD patients and that CXCL13 expression is increased in iMCD lymph node tissue (Pierson et al, AJH, 2018). Proteomic profiling of serum from 88 iMCD patients revealed CXCL13 to be the most elevated cytokine compared to healthy controls and, further, it decreases rapidly in siltuximab responders upon administration but remains elevated in siltuximab non-responders (unpublished). The overall goal of this project is to investigate CXCL13 as a possible diagnostic biomarker, indicator of response to therapy, and/or therapeutic target for iMCD. These goals directly align with one of the top priority research questions outlined on the RFA (“What is the role of CXCL13 in iMCD?”). The specific aims of this project are to (1) quantify CXCL13 expression in iMCD lymph node tissue to assess the diagnostic applicability of this test for iMCD and to determine the cellular source of CXCL13, (2) quantify CXCL13 levels in serum to determine a threshold for serum CXCL13 as a potential diagnostic test or a clinical indicator biomarker of response to siltuximab, and (3) assess the in vitro effects of CXCL13 on circulating immune cells from iMCD patients. These studies will improve understanding of iMCD biology and may translate into more effective and personalized therapies and biomarkers that will have a transformative impact. Thank you for your consideration.

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MDBR, NPC Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, NPC Million Dollar Bike Ride

Leveraging proteostasis to improve Niemann-Pick C gene therapy

Mark Schultz

Regents of the University of Michigan

$50,010

Awardee: Mark Schultz

Institution: Regents of the University of Michigan

Grant Amount: $50,010

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Niemann-Pick C is a genetically inherited disease caused by an abnormal accumulation of cholesterol. This cholesterol build-up commonly occurs due to a defect in a gene called NPC1. In Niemann-Pick C mouse models, adding back a fully functional NPC1 gene via gene therapy improves but does not fully correct the disease. Here we will leverage the information we have gained on protein folding to significantly increase the efficacy of Niemann-Pick C gene therapy.

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MDBR, CHI Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, CHI Million Dollar Bike Ride

Natural History of the Hyperinsulinism Hyperammonemia Syndrome – A Multi-center Observational Study Incorporating Patient-centered Data through the HI Global Registry

Elizabeth Rosenfeld

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

$73,045

Awardee: Elizabeth Rosenfeld

Institution: Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Grant Amount: $73,045

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Congenital hyperinsulinism (HI) is a rare genetic disorder that causes low blood sugar. The second most common genetic form of hyperinsulinism is the hyperinsulinism hyperammonemia (HI/HA) syndrome. Individuals with HI/HA syndrome develop low blood sugar after fasting and after eating protein-rich foods. HI/HA syndrome is also associated with high blood concentrations of ammonia, characteristic seizures, and learning and behavioral problems. Low blood sugar in HI/HA syndrome is treated with dietary modification and a medication called diazoxide, Studies have shown that the severity of low blood sugar in other (ie: non-HI/HA) forms of HI treated with diazoxide can improve with time – many individuals are able to discontinue diazoxide, or decrease the dose, as they age. There have been isolated reports documenting resolution of low blood sugar and seizures in individuals with HI/HA syndrome. However, studies describing the typical trajectory of disease over time in HI/HA syndrome are lacking. Closing this knowledge gap is an important first step toward individualizing therapy, establishing standards of care, and improving patient outcomes. We propose a multi-center, multimodal approach to describe the natural history of the HI/HA syndrome. Data will be obtained through both medical chart review and telephone interview of patients with HI/HA syndrome followed by the Hyperinsulinism Centers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Cook Children's Health Care System. The HI Global Registry will additionally be utilized as a source for collection of detailed, patient-level data. Primary outcomes will include the frequency of diazoxide discontinuation and seizure resolution in individuals with HI/HA syndrome. The relationship between these outcomes and other assessed patient characteristics will be explored. We will also explore the utility of this multi-prong approach to examine the natural history of different HI subtypes. Ultimately, by combining clinical data and patient perspectives, we aim to develop a deeper understanding of the natural history of the HI/HA syndrome that will lead to improved patient outcomes.

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MDBR, TBCK Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, TBCK Million Dollar Bike Ride

Evaluating the Effects of Selected Small-Molecules on a Zebrafish Model of TBCK Syndrome

Gerald B. Downes

University of Massachusetts Amherst

$50,400

Awardee: Gerald B. Downes

Institution: University of Massachusetts Amherst

Grant Amount: $50,400

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

TBCK Syndrome is a rare, poorly understood, severe neurological disease. In 2016 multiple publications first reported that mutations in the TBCK gene result in a progressive loss of muscle tone, intellectual disability, characteristic facial features, drug resistant epilepsy, and a high incidence of childhood or adolescent mortality. Outside of managing symptoms, there are currently no treatments to slow the progression of the disease. Animal models are often a key step towards better understanding a disease and developing new therapeutics, however there are currently no published animal models of TBCK Syndrome. Zebrafish are a widely used disease model due to several advantageous features, which also make this an excellent system to evaluate or screen for new therapeutic drugs. My laboratory is establishing a zebrafish model of TBCK Syndrome, and we have already created multiple tbck mutant lines and identified a phenotype. Our goals here are to continue characterizing the effects of tbck mutation on the zebrafish nervous system and to evaluate whether any of three different small-molecules, already FDA approved or known to be safe for human consumption, decrease the severity of tbck-mutant phenotypes. The completion of this project will establish a foundation to use zebrafish for small-molecule screens and help determine whether any of these compounds should be further investigated as a treatment for TBCK Syndrome.

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MDBR, LAM Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, LAM Million Dollar Bike Ride

Identify genetic regulatory circuitry driving the development of rapamycin tolerance

Yan Tang

Brigham and Women's Hospital

$73,491

Awardee: Yan Tang

Institution: Brigham and Women's Hospital

Grant Amount: $73,491

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Rapamycin (and its analogues, rapalogs) are the only effective treatment for TSC-associated diseases, including lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM). However, rapalogs can only stabilize lung function in LAM, but lung function continues to decline upon treatment cessation. It’s of paramount importance to understand the mechanisms of why and how LAM cells can survive rapamycin treatment and regrow after treatment cessation. Our single cell RNA-seq analysis of five LAM and six AML (angiomyolipoma, kidney manifestation of TSC) samples identified a subset population of LAM/AML cells with elevated stemness and dormancy programs, two typical features of drug tolerant/resistant tumor persister cells. These cells exhibited stabilized tumor cell phenotypes upon rapamycin treatment, including maintaining high expression of many TSC marker genes, suggesting a rapamycin tolerance mechanism. To identify drivers of development of rapamycin tolerance in a heterogeneous population, we have adopted a high-complex barcoding lineage tracing system that enables simultaneous assessing of each cell’s origin/lineage and transcriptomic/epigenomic profiles at single cell level. This novel approach will enable us to identify lineage-specific drivers for the development of rapamycin tolerance.

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MDBR, SETBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, SETBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride

Identifying SETBP1 haploinsufficiency molecular pathways to improve patient diagnosis and treatment.

Vanessa Fear

Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia

$45,733

Awardee: Vanessa Fear

Institution: Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia

Grant Amount: $45,733

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

SETBP1 haploinsufficiency disorder presents with intellectual disability, speech impairment and development delay, among other symptoms. There is little information regarding SETBP1 haploinsufficiency disorder and the cellular pathways that lead to disease. This study will use CRISPR gene editing and stem cell neural disease modelling to elucidate cellular pathways that contribute to SETBP1 haploinsufficiency disorder, and identify new treatments.

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MDBR, SETBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, SETBP1 Million Dollar Bike Ride

Toward Structure-based Drug-Discovery for SETBP1

Jerome Baudry

The University of Alabama in Huntsville

$45,733

Awardee: Jerome Baudry

Institution: The University of Alabama in Huntsville

Grant Amount: $45,733

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

We will start the first drug discovery pipeline toward finding a pharmaceuticals that can counter the effect of SETBP1 mutations. We will use very powerful computers to predict how mutated SETBP1 interacts with its partners in the cell, and we will identify small molecules that can correct the problems.

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MDBR, DC Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, DC Million Dollar Bike Ride

Targeting the shelterin component TINF2 in telomere diseases

Suneet Agarwal

Boston Children's Hospital

$65,445

Awardee: Suneet Agarwal

Institution: Boston Children's Hospital

Grant Amount: $65,445

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Telomere biology disorders (TBDs) affect multiple parts of the body, including the blood, lungs, liver and bones. There are no effective treatments that address the life-threatening problems. Telomeres are the ends of chromosomes that ensure ability of cells to keep dividing to replace damaged cells with new healthy ones. In TBDs, genetic mutations reduce telomere length and thus cells cannot regenerate themselves, and the tissues fail causing disease. By studying a particular mutation, we have found that decreasing a protein called TIN2 can increase telomere length in TBD patient cells. In this proposal we will study in depth whether reducing TIN2 could be a viable strategy to restore telomeres in the setting of various mutations that cause TBDs, and also test whether chemicals can be used to achieve this effect. These studies could provide a new therapeutic strategy that could be applied throughout the body for patients with TBDs.

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MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride

Identification and signaling characterization of GNASR201H/C selective inhibitors for FD/MAS

Edward Hsiao

Kelly Wentworth

University of California, San Francisco

$53,791

Awardee: Edward Hsiao

Co-PI: Kelly Wentworth

Institution: University of California, San Francisco

Grant Amount: $53,791

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Fibrous dysplasia and McCune Albright syndrome (FD/MAS) are severe congenital conditions caused by activating point mutations in the GNAS gene; however, specific molecular tools for directly perturbing GNAS activity in a mutation specific fashion are largely lacking. The overall goal of this proposal is to complete the analysis of a series of promising compounds that we previously identified as likely to specifically bind GNASR201H. We will use a novel human induced pluripotent stem cell model carrying the GNASR201H mutation in the endogenous locus to test our top drug candidates for their ability to block the abnormal cAMP production, and also use physical assays to determine if the inhibition occurs through direct binding to GNAS or by acting on a downstream pathway component. This proposal directly addresses critical needs by identifying promising molecular tools for dissecting GNASR201H function and serving as scaffolds for developing novel therapeutics that directly target GNAS mutations that cause FD/MAS, and validating a new human IPS cell model that will be useful for studies of cellular differentiation and function in FD/MAS. All reagents, compounds, cell lines, and analytical methods are already available through the collaborators and experienced team.

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MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride

Structure activity relationship studies of compounds to treat FD/MAS

Fernando Fierro

Charles Hoffman

University of California Davis

$53,791

Awardee: Fernando Fierro

Co-PI: Charles Hoffman

Institution: University of California Davis

Grant Amount: $53,791

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

FD lesions contain cells with excess G alpha protein activity that stimulates adenylyl cyclases (ACs), increasing cAMP levels. This disruption of appropriate cell signaling ultimately affects normal bone homeostasis. We propose testing a set of compounds with promising AC-inhibitory activity, with the ultimate goal of developing a therapeutic drug. Our proposal is a collaborative effort among different research groups: Dr. Fierro will identify compounds that reverse GNAS(R201H) or GNAS(R201C) effects in human bone marrow stromal/stem cells. Dr. Hoffman will use yeast to elucidate if the compounds act directly or indirectly on ACs. Dr. Inglese will perform in vitro pharmacokinetic studies with the same compounds.

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MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, FDMAS Million Dollar Bike Ride

Unraveling the role of Adiponectin-expressing bone marrow stromal cells in the cellular pathogenesis of Fibrous Dysplasia

Biagio Palmisano

Sapienza University of Rome

$53,791

Awardee: Biagio Palmisano

Institution: Sapienza University of Rome

Grant Amount: $53,791

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

We have previously shown that osteoclasts, the cells that normally destroy damaged bone to allow its regeneration, play a major role in the appearance and evolution of Fibrous Dysplasia (FD). We know that in growing FD lesions, the number of osteoclasts is abnormally high due to the production of a factor named RANKL by the pathological tissue. However, what we do not know yet is who produces RANKL at the very beginning of the disease, when osteoclasts destroy the healthy bone that will be then replaced by the pathological tissue. Recently, by generating a new Gs(alpha) transgenic mouse model, we have identified the cell type that is involved in this early phase of the disease. In this project, we want to investigate the characteristics of this cell type and the mechanisms through which it produces RANKL, both in the absence and in the presence of the Gs(alpha) mutation. Understanding these points may allow the development of therapies that act specifically on the very first trigger of FD lesions.

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MDBR, NBIA(BPAN) Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, NBIA(BPAN) Million Dollar Bike Ride

Reversing Brain Iron Overload in BPAN by a Natural Small Molecule

Young-Ah Seo

University of Michigan

$66,366

Awardee: Young-Ah Seo

Institution: University of Michigan

Grant Amount: $66,366

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

The overall goal of this project is to develop new therapeutic strategies that can reduce brain iron overload and iron-induced neurodegeneration in BPAN patients. We have identified that a natural small molecule is exceptionally effective at promoting iron transport. We have now found that iron accumulates in the BPAN cell model and that the resulting iron overload can be mitigated by this small molecule. Building on these preliminary results, this proposal will extensively characterize the capacity for a small molecule to mobilize excess iron from inside cells and will test the overarching hypothesis that small molecule-mediated iron mobilization can mitigate neuronal cell death in BPAN cell models and patient-derived primary fibroblast cells. Completion of the proposed research will advance our fundamental understanding of the mechanistic underpinnings of brain iron overload in BPAN and will build a foundation for the potential therapeutic use of small molecule mobilizers of intracellular iron.

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MDBR, Cohen Million Dollar Bike Ride MDBR, Cohen Million Dollar Bike Ride

Membrane homeostasis as potential therapeutic angle in Cohen Syndrome

Jens Luders

Institute for Research in Biomedicine, Barcelona, Spain

$47,161.00

Awardee: Jens Luders

Institution: Institute for Research in Biomedicine, Barcelona, Spain

Grant Amount: $47,161.00

Funding Period: February 1, 2022 - January 31, 2023


Summary:

Cohen Syndrome is a rare disease caused by mutations in the VPS13B gene. Patients affected by this disease are born with several disabilities and health problems. For example, children with Cohen Syndrome may develop slowly, have a small head size, intellectual disability, and an overall weak muscle tone. They frequently suffer from a reduction in the number of certain blood cells, which increases the risk of infections, and loss of vision, which becomes worse with age and can lead to blindness. Unfortunately, there is no treatment available for these patients. Since the molecular and cellular functions of the VPS13B gene are still poorly understood, it is unclear how its mutation leads to Cohen Syndrome. This makes it impossible to develop a treatment or therapy. We have recently obtained preliminary data suggesting that Cohen Syndrome may involve defects in primary cilia, hair-like structures on the surface of cells that function as a cell's antenna. They allow cells to receive and respond to signals from their environment and are very important for various developmental processes including formation of the brain and the retina. In this project we will uncover how defects in VPS13B may affect cilium formation and function in three different model systems: cultured cells including cells obtained from Cohen Syndrome patients, retinal tissue grown in a culture dish from patient cells, and zebrafish embryos, which recapitulate many developmental processes that also occur in humans including brain and eye development. Using the same model systems, we will then test if culture supplements or pharmacological treatments may be used to repair ciliary defects. If so, these treatments may be further developed into therapies in the future.

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