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Michael J. Fox Foundation Funds $1.1 Million for Cutting-Edge Approaches to 
Parkinson's Disease Under Rapid Response Innovation Awards 2008


Last update: 1:41 p.m. EDT July 29, 2008
NEW YORK, July 29, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- $2 million in 
total funding expected by year's end
Gene silencing techniques and induced pluripotent stem cell technology are 
among the cutting-edge approaches to Parkinson's drug development funded 
through The Michael J. Fox Foundation's Rapid Response Innovation Awards 
2008. As part of its mission to drive transformative treatments and a cure 
for PD, the Foundation has awarded $1.1 million for 15 high-risk, 
high-reward Parkinson's disease research projects under the initiative in 
the first half of the year. Applications are still being accepted, and a 
total of $2 million in Rapid Response awards is expected by year's end.
Rapid Response helps keep new and novel approaches to Parkinson's disease 
flowing into the drug development pipeline by allowing researchers to pursue 
their most exciting ideas in real time. The Foundation accepts Rapid 
Response proposals on a rolling basis with no deadline, and funding 
decisions are made within six weeks of application. Awards of up to $75,000 
are available for one-year basic, preclinical or clinical research projects 
in any Parkinson's-relevant arena. The program has met with an enthusiastic 
response from the research community, both within Parkinson's disease and 
beyond, since it was first launched in January 2007.
"Rapid Response infuses capital quickly into exciting new ideas that could 
open up important new avenues of inquiry for Parkinson's disease," said 
Katie Hood, CEO of The Michael J. Fox Foundation. "Our goal is to provide 
the funding needed to further 'build the case' for these new concepts, 
developing the data required before other traditional funding sources can 
step in."
The program's application process and funding criteria emphasize speed and 
novelty. Funded projects typically are strong ideas being tested for the 
first time. Unlike other Foundation initiatives, Rapid Response allows for 
the submission of applications at any time of year. There is no pre-proposal 
triage stage, and the standard MJFF application has been shortened to three 
pages. Additionally, postdoctoral researchers are permitted to apply as 
principal investigators provided the head of their lab serves as 
administrative PI.
Among the potentially high-impact Rapid Response projects funded so far this 
year:
-- Asa Abeliovich, MD, PhD, of Columbia University is working to determine 
whether a gene silencing technique using microRNAs -- short, noncoding 
molecules of RNA -- can be effective in reducing alpha-synuclein, a protein 
whose aggregation, or clumping, in the brain is a hallmark of Parkinson's 
pathology.
-- Jian Feng, PhD, of SUNY-Buffalo, and Patrick Alfryn Lewis, PhD, of the 
Institute of Neurology (London, UK) and John A. Hardy, PhD, University 
College London (London, UK) are conducting two separate investigations using 
newly discovered induced pluripotent stem cell (iPS) technology to shed 
greater light on the Parkinson's-implicated genes parkin and LRRK2. Using 
iPS, the teams are engineering stem cells from skin cells, then using these 
engineered stem cells to generate human dopamine neurons with or without 
mutations in the respective genes. Both projects seek to characterize 
disease mechanisms set off by genetic mutations and to create new models for 
testing therapeutic approaches that could prevent these events from 
occurring.
-- Rahul Srinivasan, MBBS, PhD, and Henry A. Lester, PhD, of the California 
Institute of Technology are working to better understand epidemiological 
findings that have consistently shown smoking may protect against PD. The 
researchers hope to elucidate the mechanisms by which nicotine may protect 
dopamine neurons through development and validation of a screening test for 
small molecules that could increase nicotine receptor expression in the 
brain.
-- Marcus Unger, MD, and Wolfgang Oertel, MD, of Phillips University 
(Marburg, Germany) want to find better treatments for the digestive problems 
that dramatically affect Parkinson's patients' quality of life, as well as 
test the Braak hypothesis, which posits that Parkinson's disease progresses 
through the body and to the brain in a series of stages starting in the 
gastrointestinal system. They are examining a possible link between 
constipation and Lewy body pathology in the gastric lining of people with 
PD.
A complete list of 2008 Rapid Response Innovation Awards to date, including 
researcher bios and grant abstracts, is available at www.michaeljfox.org.
Founded in 2000, The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research is 
dedicated to ensuring the development of a cure for Parkinson's disease 
within the coming decade through an aggressively funded research agenda. The 
Foundation has funded $126 million in research to date.
SOURCE Michael J. Fox Foundation
 http://www.michaeljfox.org
Copyright (C) 2008 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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