|
| [January 14, 2013] |
 |
Brain & Behavior Research Foundation Awards $1.5 Million in NARSAD Distinguished Investigator Grants
GREAT NECK, N.Y. --(Business Wire)--
The Brain
& Behavior Research Foundation (formerly NARSAD, the National
Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression) announced the
latest recipients of its highly competitive NARSAD
Distinguished Investigator Grants. Since 1987, the Brain & Behavior
Research Foundation has invested close to $300 million in research
projects to identify the causes, improve treatments and develop
prevention strategies for mental illness.
NARSAD Distinguished Investigator Grants enable outstanding scientists
to pursue new, cutting-edge ideas with the greatest potential for
breakthroughs. "We fund the most promising ideas from around the world
that are likely to advance our understanding and improve treatments for
mental illness," says Jeffrey
Borenstein, M.D., Acting President & CEO, Brain & Behavior Research
Foundation. "The fifteen brilliant scientists selected strive to improve
the lives of those suffering and as they face increasingly tough funding
challenges, the support made possible through donors of the Brain &
Behavior Research Foundation is more important than ever."
The fifteen established investigators, selected from 225 applicants,
will receive one-year grants of up to $100,000 to pursue innovative
research ideas for disorders including depression, bipolar disorder,
schizophrenia, autism and anxiety disorders such as obsessive-compulsive
and post-traumatic stress disorders. Annual selections were made by
members of the Foundation's Scientific
Council, a volunteer group of 138 leaders in brain and behavior
research.
Scientific Council Member and Chair of the Distinguished Investigator
Grant selection process, Jack D. Barchas, M.D., Weill Cornell Medical
College, Cornell University said: "The latest Distinguished
Investigators funded by the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation have
the potential to transform mental illness treatment and prevention. Some
investigators hope to create breakthroughs in the targeting of
treatments for schizophrenia, depression and bipolar disorder based on
findings at the molecular level. thers plan to advance testing and
treatment using robotics, virtual reality, nanotechnology and
optogenetics. Still more grantees will work to improve early therapeutic
intervention strategies for anxiety disorders. This year's Grantees are
truly exceptional and I only wish we could have funded more."
The grant recipients and their studies follow:
BASIC RESEARCH - to understand what happens in the brain to cause
mental illness:
Dr. Gary Bassell, School of Medicine, Emory University, will
explore dysfunction in synapses (sites of information transmission from
brain cell to brain cell) in disorders such as autism and schizophrenia.
The research will focus on a signaling pathway important in synapse
development and plasticity and thus learning and memory.
Dr. Bonnie L. Firestein, Rutgers University, will study a
schizophrenia susceptibility gene that may be implicated in the striking
changes in dendrites (spines on nerve cells where messages are received)
observed in patients with schizophrenia.
Dr. John R. Kelsoe, University of California, San Diego, will
explore the relationships between neurotrophins (proteins that play a
role in neuron growth and survival), including the role of brain-derived
neurotrophic factor and other factors in bipolar disorder. Scientific
Council Member Dr. Fred Gage, Salk Institute, who discovered that the
brain can grow new neurons and potentially replace diseased cells, will
collaborate.
DIAGNOSTIC TOOLS / EARLY INTERVENTION -to recognize early signs
of mental illnesses and treat as early as possible:
Dr. Schahram Akbarian, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai,
will examine changes in the brain's prefrontal cortex that may be
relevant to changes observed in people with schizophrenia. The study
will build upon Dr. Akbarian's earlier discovery, with the support of a
NARSAD Young Investigator Grant, of the role of a key enzyme in the
prefrontal cortex in psychosis.
Dr. Lars Vedel Kessing, University of Copenhagen, will look at
genetic differences between bipolar disorder patients to answer the
critical question of which patients may respond to lithium treatment. He
will study 500 patients who benefited from lithium and 3,500 who have
not.
Dr. Barbara O. Rothbaum, School of Medicine, Emory University, is
striving to identify the optimal timing for early Intervention aimed at
preventing the development of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Scientific Council Member Kerry J. Ressler, M.D., Ph.D., one of the
world's leading experts in the study of PTSD and the biological
mechanisms of fear will collaborate.
NEW TECHNOLOGIES - to advance or create new ways of studying and
understanding the brain:
Dr. Susan M. Dymecki, Harvard Medical School, is widely
recognized for groundbreaking work in developmental neuroscience and
brain-mapping technologies, and in her new study, she will add
electrophysiology to investigate the behavior of neurons of the
serotonin neuroregulatory system, implicated in depression and PTSD.
Dr. Luis de Lecea, Stanford University School of Medicine, will
use optogenetics (a revolutionary technology making it possible to
control and study behavior with great precision) to investigate the
possible role of nerve cells-noradrenergic A2 neurons-in the
stress-related norepinephrine systems in anxiety, depression and PTSD.
Dr. Brian Litt, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine, will investigate the use of nanodevices for targeting
treatments to only reach unhealthy nerve cells and circuits in brain and
behavior disorders, thus avoiding potentially harmful impact on
uninvolved areas of the brain.
Dr. Rafael Yuste, Columbia University, will use advanced imaging
approaches and photon lasers to examine the role of chandelier cells in
schizophrenia. It is thought that these neurons could alter the balance
between internal brain processes and external sensory stimulation.
NEXT GENERATION THERAPIES - to reduce symptoms of mental illness
and retrain the brain:
Dr. Ege T. Kavalali, University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center, will work to improve the usefulness of the rapid-acting
antidepressant ketamine. He will explore ketamine/brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF) interactions to find ways to combat the
treatment's side effects.
Dr. Barbara Milrod, Weill Cornell Medical College, will conduct a
trial to determine the effectiveness of panic-focused psychodynamic
psychotherapy as a treatment for separation anxiety for patients with
depression and/or anxiety who have not responded to other treatments.
Separation anxiety precedes most cases of adult anxiety disorders and is
a risk factor for treatment failure.
Dr. Sohee Park, Vanderbilt University, an earlier NARSAD
Young Investigator Grantee, will study tests and treatments for
psychosis to specifically target the social brain network through
virtual reality and robotics to increase the level of engagement in
individualized social training.
Dr. Nenad Sestan, Yale School of Medicine, will study mechanisms
underlying development and dysfunction in the cortex, the seat of higher
brain function to obtain insights that may yield targets for new
treatments for illnesses of cognitive impairment.
Dr. Stephen Traynelis, Emory University, will explore a
potential schizophrenia treatment approach based on altering the
function of the neuroregulator glutamine in a chain of events that
involves glutamine receptor N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA).
The Brain
& Behavior Research Foundation has been awarding NARSAD
Grants for 25 years. The Foundation has invested close to $300
million in NARSAD Grants to more than 3,300 scientists worldwide since
1987, leading to thousands of scientific achievements to improve the
lives of those with mental illness.

[ Back To Homepage ]
|