UNMC College of Dentistry researcher receives $125,000 grant from Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research

The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinsons Research has awarded Kalipada

Pahan, Ph.D., associate professor of biochemistry, UNMC College of Dentistry,

a two-year $125,000 grant to study the effectiveness of a drug to stop

the destruction of cells in mouse models with Parkinsons Disease.

Dr. Pahan is one of eight Parkinsons disease researcher groups whove

recently received about $4 million in research grants through the new Community

Fast Track research initiative, led by the Michael J. Fox Foundation for

Parkinsons Research. The program officially named 18 projects which it

will fund over two years through the investigator-initiated program, designed

to stimulate novel, innovative and high-impact approaches to the field

of Parkinsons research.

Grant recipients were chosen from a large pool of international applicants

assessed on the quality of novel science proposed as well as potential

to increase understanding of Parkinsons and eventually translate findings

into patient treatments. Among this years awardees, three researchers

will be receiving funding specifically to investigate Parkinsons disease

for the first time. These three grants represent an early success for the

program, which aims to attract new scientists from other research fields

to study PD.

Community Fast Track offers a channel through which Parkinsons groups

can contribute to an extremely selective peer-review award process, explained

Deborah W. Brooks, executive director. This collaboration is distinguished

not only by the merit of each individual application funded but also by

the power of the Parkinsons community as a whole to draw new researchers

into the field and cultivate them for long-term development.

Parkinson’s disease is a progressive, incurable neurological disorder

that results from degeneration of neurons in a region of the brain that

controls movement. The cause is unknown. Degeneration creates a shortage

of the brain signaling chemical known as dopamine, causing the movement

impairments that characterize the disease.

Im thrilled to receive a grant to study Parkinsons disease, Dr.

Pahan said. Diseases of the brain affect everything. We want to know why

these cells are dying and how theyre dying. Its the most fascinating

area to study.

Dr. Pahans research team will study NF-kBs potential role in the Parkinsons

disease process in laboratory mice models. Similar to multiple sclerosis,

inflammation plays an important role in the loss of neurons in Parkinsons

disease. NF-kB, a protein present naturally in the body, is involved in

the production of different inflammatory molecules. Their study will 

focus on the role of NBD peptides, peptides shown to inhibit the activation

of NF-kB, in the disease process of Parkinsons disease in animal models.

Dr. Pahan is involved in studying multiple sclerosis, another neurodegenerative

disorder, and has published results of, the effectiveness of a variety

of drugs on multiple sclerosis in mouse models in the laboratory.

Researchers have found when multiple sclerosis is present in animal

models, the amount of NF-kB markedly increases in the brain and spinal

cord. Dr. Pahan and his colleagues recently have found NBD peptides markedly

inhibit the inflammatory disease process of multiple sclerosis in mouse

models. The results raise the possibility that NBD peptides may turn out

to be an anti-neuroinflammatory drug.

Dr. Pahan said understanding how the disease works is important to developing

effective drugs that protect the brain and stop the progression of Parkinsons

disease. We know this drug works in suppressing the destructive process

in the brain of MS in mouse models, Dr. Pahan said. We want to know if

this drug does the same thing in mice that exhibit Parkinsons disease.

In the United States, at least 500,000 people are believed to suffer

from Parkinson’s disease, and about 50,000 new cases are reported annually.

The incidence is expected to increase as the average age of the population

increases. The disorder appears to be slightly more common in men than

women.