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Grant - Summer 2018 - MG – Kevin C. O’Connor, PhD

“Overall, this work will further our understanding of how MG initiates and progresses, and uncover fundamental disease mechanisms that have the potential to change the understanding of the immunopathology. In addition, we expect to develop clinically relevant disease models that will directly impact patient care.”
Kevin C. O’Connor, associate professor of Neurology at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, was awarded an MDA Research Grant totaling $300,000 over 3 years to study novel isolation and investigation of pathogenic cells in myasthenia gravis (MG).
Autoimmunity is a malfunction of the immune system where an immune response develops against one’s own tissues (self). MG is an autoimmune disease caused by circulating autoantibodies (antibodies against self), produced by a malfunctioning immune system, that interrupt signaling at the neuromuscular junction. Patients experience muscle weakness, which can be deadly when muscles involved in respiration are affected.
The human immune system is comprised of trillions of cells distributed throughout the body. Only a tiny fraction directly contributes to autoimmune disease. In MG, those that contribute are a subset of B cells, which produce the autoantibodies. In order to investigate this small subset and find ways to target it, researchers need a way to isolate these autoreactive B cells from other immune cells. This advance has yet to be achieved because the technology has not been established.
To this end, Dr. O’Connor’s team has developed a novel approach for isolating the specific B cells that cause MG. The team will investigate these cells to determine how they produce disease-causing autoantibodies and how they behave during treatment and disease exacerbation. Overall, this work will further the understanding of how MG initiates and progresses, and support the application and development of therapeutics that both repair dysfunction and specifically target disease-causing cells.
Grantee: MG – Kevin C. O’Connor, PhD
Grant type: Research Grant
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