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Grant - Summer 2019 - ALS - Jeffrey D. Rothstein, MD, PhD

Jeffrey D. Rothstein, MD, PhD, director of the Brain Science Institute and director of the Robert Packard Center for ALS Research at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, was awarded an MDA research grant totaling $300,000 over three years to investigate the mechanism of cell-specific injury in C9ORF72-related amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD).
ALS is a progressive neuromuscular disease that destroys muscle-controlling nerve cells called motor neurons. In 2011, it was discovered that a defect in the C9ORF72 gene where one segment of the gene is repeated too many times — also known as a repeat expansion — is the most common cause of the familial form of ALS and is found in some sporadic cases as well. In some patients, the C9ORF72 mutation leads to both ALS and FTD, while in others it leads to FTD only for reasons still unknown.
In a series of previous grants, Dr. Rothstein compared induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from people with C9ORF72-ALS to cells from unaffected individuals to find a molecular signature, or biomarker, for the disease-causing effects of the mutant gene. In later MDA-funded work, he used ALS patient-derived stem cells to investigate the role of nuclear dysfunction in ALS caused by C9ORF72 mutations, with the aim of uncovering novel drug targets for ALS. His most recent grant was for Answer ALS, a nationwide consortium that is building a tool for data integration and characterization of disease networks in ALS.
In this newly awarded MDA grant, Dr. Rothstein will identify pathways behind cortical neuron degeneration in FTD versus spinal neuron degeneration in ALS by using human iPS cell-derived forebrain neurons and spinal motor neurons from patients diagnosed with C9ORF72-FTD and ALS/FTD. These studies will help to identify common cellular mechanisms of neurodegeneration in FTD and ALS as well as pathways unique to each cell type, which will better inform the design of therapeutic intervention in both diseases.
https://doi.org/10.55762/pc.gr.87342
Grantee: ALS - Jeffrey D. Rothstein, MD, PhD
Grant type: Research Grant
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