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Grant - Winter 2019 - ALS - Ze’ev Melamed, PhD

"I believe that my proposed study may open the door to a completely new and promising direction in ALS research. Implementation of cellular and genomics tools offers an innovative approach to uncover mechanisms through which stathmin-2 loss-of-function provokes ALS pathogenesis and if so, identify a feasible therapeutic approach."
Ze’ev Melamed, PhD, postdoctoral fellow at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research at the University of California, San Diego, was awarded an MDA development grant totaling $210,000 over three years to collaborate with Ionis Pharmaceuticals to determine how suppression of stathmin-2 protein, recently shown to be decreased in the motor neurons of sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients, drives motor neuron degeneration and whether reversal of stathmin-2 defects could have therapeutic potential for ALS.
One hallmark of most cases of ALS is the accumulation of the RNA-binding protein TDP-43 into aggregates (clumps) outside the nucleus of the cell, but it is still not understood how these defects contribute to disease. In previous work, Dr. Melamed used cell models to discover that TDP-43 regulates the maturation of the mRNA (DNA code creates RNA in the form of a messenger, or mRNA molecule) of stathmin-2, a microtubule-associated protein previously implicated in axonal growth and regeneration. In other words, he found that decreased levels of stathmin-2 mRNA is a consequence of TDP-43 pathology in ALS.
In this work, he will study how stathmin-2 affects the maintenance and repair of motor neurons, and how loss of stathmin-2 affects the ability of neurons to regenerate. He will also work with Ionis Pharmaceuticals to develop an antisense oligonucleotide designed to correct aberrant processing of stathmin-2 mRNA, possibly having the therapeutic effect of restoring levels of stathmin-2 in motor neurons of patients with ALS.
https://doi.org/10.55762/pc.gr.84539
Grantee: ALS - Ze’ev Melamed, PhD
Grant type: Development Grant
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