NIH, MDA ANNOUNCE THREE TOP
MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY RESEARCH CENTERS
TUCSON, Ariz., Oct. 14, 2003 — The National Institutes of Health
(NIH) and the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) today announced the
creation of three “centers of excellence” for muscular dystrophy
research.
The establishment of the centers was mandated by the MD-CARE
(Muscular Dystrophy Community Assistance, Research and Education) Act,
passed in 2001, following extensive lobbying efforts by MDA.
The MD-CARE Act directs the federal government, through NIH, to allocate
substantial funding for research that one day may result in treatments
or cures for the muscular
dystrophies. MDA, a voluntary health organization supported by private
donations, will supplement the NIH grants with its own funds.
The research centers named are at the University of Washington in Seattle,
the University of Rochester (N.Y.) and the University of Pittsburgh.
The centers will act as collaborative hubs of basic and applied research
and will maintain partnerships with other institutions. The University
of Washington center will work with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center,
also in Seattle, and the University of Pittsburgh center will collaborate
with the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and Ohio State
University in Columbus.
Each of the three centers will receive up to $1 million in federal funding
through NIH per year for five years and up to $500,000 per year from
MDA for three years, for a total of up to $6.5 million per center. Two
additional centers are expected to be funded in the future.
The centers, at universities that already conduct basic, clinical and
behavioral research projects, were chosen because of their research
faculty members’ expertise and current projects dealing with muscular
dystrophy. With NIH and MDA support, they’ll unite teams of scientists
to create knowledge that will improve the quality of life for people
with muscular dystrophy. NIH said the three centers exemplify "expertise,
infrastructure and resources focused on major questions about MD."
MDA Director of Research Development Sharon Hesterlee said, “These
centers bring together a critical combination of muscular dystrophy-related
research that could lead to much faster therapy development. By augmenting
the centers’ NIH funding, MDA can help ensure that financial means
are available for the centers to fulfill their potential."
Since 1950, MDA has led funding of research into many forms of neuromuscular
disease. All forms of MD are characterized by progressive weakness and
degeneration of voluntary muscles that control movement. The heart and
respiratory muscles also often are involved, which can shorten life
and lead to severe disability.
Under center director molecular geneticist Joseph C. Glorioso, researchers
at the University of Pittsburgh are studying gene and stem cell therapies
to treat muscle diseases, in particular Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Molecular geneticist Jeffrey S. Chamberlain will direct the center at
the University of Washington. His and other groups will conduct studies
to develop new gene therapies for Duchenne and other forms of muscular
dystrophy.
Neurologist Richard T. Moxley III will lead the University of Rochester
center. Researchers there will look at skeletal muscle at cellular and
molecular levels to determine which factors might contribute to the
symptoms of facioscapulohumeral and myotonic muscular
dystrophies.
A steering committee of NIH staff scientists, directors of each of the
research centers, a public member and a bioethicist will oversee progress
of research activities at the three sites.
MDA is a voluntary health agency working to defeat more than 40 neuromuscular
diseases, including the MDs, through programs of worldwide research,
comprehensive services, and far-reaching professional and public health
education.
|