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NIH Names Three New Muscular Dystrophy Centers of Excellence

TUCSON, Ariz., Nov. 4, 2005 — Three new muscular dystrophy centers of excellence have been created by the National Institutes of Health, the NIH and the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) announced today.

The three Senator Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Centers, named after the late champion of muscular dystrophy issues in Congress, have been added to three existing Wellstone centers, all at major universities. The new ones are in Philadelphia, Washington and Iowa City.

Muscular dystrophy is characterized by progressive weakness and loss of voluntary muscles that control movement.

“We’re pleased to see that our hard work in convincing Congress to increase funding for muscular dystrophy research continues to pay dividends,” MDA President and CEO Robert Ross said. “This is a fitting tribute to the efforts of Senator Wellstone and a positive step on the road to finding treatments and cures for these terrible diseases.”

One new center will be at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. It will be co-directed by H. Lee Sweeney, a molecular biologist and MDA research grantee at Penn, and Kathryn Wagner, a physician-scientist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore who has worked on MDA-funded projects.

Two projects at Penn are focused on ways to increase muscle growth and on compounds to block muscle-destroying enzymes. The core facility, a muscle physiology lab, will analyze mice with various types of muscular dystrophy.

Clinical trials of potential treatments for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) are planned.

Other sites cooperating with the Penn center are the University of Florida at Gainesville and NIH’s National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) in Bethesda, Md.

A second new center is at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, under the direction of molecular biologist and longtime MDA grantee Eric Hoffman and physician Diana Escolar, both current MDA research grantees.

The focus in Washington will be on biochemical pathways that contribute to DMD. One project aims to identify genetic modifiers of DMD, while two others will focus on muscle cell damage and muscle development.

The Washington center has a bioinformatics and computing core, as well as a clinical core. Collaborating with the center is the University of Padova in Italy.

The third center, at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, will be directed by Kevin Campbell, a protein chemist and longtime MDA research grantee, along with pathologist Steven Moore, who has received MDA support in the past.

One Iowa project focuses on muscle membrane maintenance and repair and another on stem cell treatment in mice.

Core centers there will serve as a national resource for stem cells for MD researchers and will provide advanced services for diagnosing muscular dystrophies.

The new centers join three existing centers at the University of Washington at Seattle, the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Rochester (N.Y.). NIH and MDA jointly fund these centers.

All the centers spring from the Muscular Dystrophy Community Assistance, Research and Education (MD-CARE) Act, passed by Congress in 2001 with strong support form MDA.

The centers work individually and cooperatively, and are guided by a steering committee that includes representatives from each center.

MDA (www.mda.org) is a voluntary health agency working to defeat more than 40 neuromuscular diseases through programs of worldwide research, comprehensive services, and far-reaching professional and public health education.

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