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Grant - Additional Grants 2019 - DMD – Rachelle H. Crosbie, PhD

"We hope to identify a pre-clinical candidate that will treat DMD by boosting sarcospan levels. We also want to learn more about how our lead compounds target sarcospan in muscle cells so we can design better, more effective drugs."
Rachelle H. Crosbie, PhD, professor and chair of Integrative Biology and Physiology at the University of California, Los Angeles, was awarded MDA Venture Philanthropy (MVP) funding totaling $389,463 over two years to develop a small molecule drug that increases expression of sarcospan, a protein that may help to prevent the muscle damage that occurs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). MVP funding is awarded to researchers developing therapeutics for neuromuscular diseases to help lower the barriers and bridge the high-risk stages of drug development.
DMD is caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene on the X chromosome that result in little or no production of dystrophin, a protein essential to keeping muscle cells intact. While funded by an MDA postdoctoral fellowship starting in 1996, Dr. Crosbie identified a protein called sarcospan that may improve the structural integrity of dystrophic muscle in DMD.
After setting up her own lab, Dr. Crosbie continued to work on sarcospan. Her lab found that increasing the amount of sarcospan can convey a protective effect on skeletal and cardiac muscle in mice with muscular dystrophy. Her team has recently identified a set of small molecules that increase the levels of sarcospan, and with support from the MVP award, her team will chemically optimize these lead compounds and test them in DMD mice and DMD human cells. If successful, this work may lead to the development of a novel drug that could slow the loss of function in limb muscles, respiratory muscles, and heart.
Grantee: DMD – Rachelle H. Crosbie, PhD
Grant type: Venture Philanthropy Grant
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