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Grant - Summer 2019 - ALS - Davide Trotti, PhD

Davide Trotti, PhD, professor of Neuroscience at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, was awarded an MDA research grant totaling $300,000 over three years to investigate the mechanism by which the toxic mutations in C9ORF72-amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) contribute to the degradation of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ).
ALS is a progressive neuromuscular disease that destroys muscle-controlling nerve cells called motor neurons. Normally, nerve cells communicate with muscle cells by sending electrical signals across the NMJ. Neuromuscular junction disorders result from the destruction, malfunction, or absence of one or more key proteins involved in the transmission of signals between muscles and nerves. Frequently, disruption of this communication happens early in the course of ALS.
In 2011, researchers found that a mutation in the C9ORF72 gene where one segment is repeated too many times — otherwise known as a repeat expansion — is the most common cause of familial (inherited) ALS and is also found in sporadic (not inherited) cases. Although mutations in C9ORF72 represent the most common cause of ALS, little is known about the mechanisms by which these mutations impair neuromuscular communication at the NMJ.
In previous MDA-funded work, Dr. Trotti studied how the accumulation of protein clumps in patients with C9ORF72-ALS may contribute to motor neuron death. Using rodent and C9ORF72-ALS patient induced pluripotent stem cell models, Dr. Trotti will identify the NMJ pathogenic changes caused by C9ORF72-related toxic dipeptide proteins that lead to this loss of motor neuron-muscle connectivity in C9ORF72-ALS.
Grantee: ALS - Davide Trotti, PhD
Grant type: Research Grant
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