SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 28, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- A team of
scientists at Gladstone Institutes and UC
San Francisco (UCSF) is launching the Gladstone-UCSF Center
for Neurovascular Brain Immunology to study neurological diseases
in a unique way that could lead to the development of novel
treatments. This launch is supported by a $2.5-million donation from the Simon Family
Trust.
The new center will provide an integrated platform for basic and
clinical research, bringing together vascular biology, immunology,
and neuroscience. This combination will bridge the gap between
scientific disciplines that have traditionally been viewed as
distinct, and studied as such.
"Historically, neurological diseases have been classified as
being only degenerative, inflammatory, or vascular," explains the
center's founding director, Katerina Akassoglou, PhD. "But we now
know, given recent insights from clinical research and the failure
of many clinical trials, that this classification cannot explain
how diseases start and progress, nor has it been able to identify
the best potential drug candidates."
Scientists have also learned that disease manifestations cannot
be described in isolation, because they arise from an intricate
network of shared mechanisms in the brain, immune, and vascular
systems. The new Gladstone-UCSF center aims to shed light on these
overlapping mechanisms to develop new treatments for a wide range
of neurological diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's
disease, and traumatic brain injury. Their work will also have
broad implications in diseases with neuroimmune and neurovascular
features, including neonatal brain injury, epilepsy, infectious
diseases, and psychiatric disorders.
"Common threads across brain diseases that involve the immune
system have been overlooked," says Akassoglou, who is also a senior
investigator at Gladstone and a professor of neurology at UCSF.
"For instance, blood leaks in the brain used to be considered a
consequence of brain dysfunction. Yet, we have discovered that
these leaks often precede cognitive decline in neurodegenerative
disease and inhibit repair. In addition, vascular damage is
emerging as a central player in brain disease, and the immune
system is the link between vascular pathology and the brain."
Over the past two decades, Akassoglou and her team have made
landmark discoveries that connect the blood, the inflammatory
response, and brain disease. For example, they made a breakthrough
discovery that a clotting factor in the blood (called fibrinogen)
is causal to disease in the brain, as its leakage is required to
activate the damaging immune response and the neurodegeneration
that follows.
"We have a new appreciation of the challenges and opportunities
in drug discovery for neurodegenerative diseases at the
blood-brain-immune interface," says Akassoglou. "Innovative
approaches in imaging and drug discovery platforms at our new
center have the potential to transform biomedicine."
"This new center perfectly aligns with Gladstone's approach of
using science to overcome disease," says Deepak Srivastava, MD, president of Gladstone
Institutes. "Katerina's research provided evidence that vascular
pathology is a primary process in the development of disease and,
as a result, offers a completely new perspective for how
neurological diseases might be treated. Her expertise and vision
led to the creation of this center, which will be critical for
basic discovery and for developing novel imaging tools, biomarkers,
and therapies."
Although other academic centers combine neuroscience and
immunology, the new Gladstone-UCSF center is unique in its
integration of vascular biology as a third and equal player in
brain disease.
"The new center will leverage Katerina's groundbreaking
discoveries in this exciting area of research and will provide her
and other colleagues at Gladstone, UCSF, and beyond with
unprecedented opportunities to unravel the intriguing relationships
among the vascular, immune, and nervous systems," says Lennart Mucke, MD, director of the Gladstone
Institute of Neurological Disease. "Since vascular mechanisms may
be early triggers of brain disease, targeting these triggers could
allow physicians to intervene much sooner to prevent and halt
disease progression."
The center will take a three-pronged approach to uncover the
role of vascular abnormalities in the brain. The first will be
focused on research and bring together basic and clinical
scientists to discover new mechanisms that control disease at the
interface of vascular biology, immunology, and neuroscience. The
second will leverage cutting-edge imaging technologies to develop
new molecular probes to study and diagnose neurovascular
alterations in brain diseases. And the third cluster, aimed at drug
discovery and therapeutics, will consist of pre-clinical and
clinical testing of new biologic, cellular, and small molecule
therapies, as well as biomarker studies.
Akassoglou and her team at Gladstone will collaborate closely
with scientists at UCSF in the Weill Institute for Neurosciences,
the Department of Neurology (including the Memory and Aging Center,
the Division of Neuroimmunology and Glial Biology, and the
Neurovascular Division), the Department of Pediatrics, and the
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry. While Gladstone offers
expertise in basic research and state-of-the-art imaging
modalities, UCSF provides invaluable resources in patient
databases, clinical testing, and biomarker studies.
"To implement the center's visionary approach, we need the
participation of scientists and clinicians with wide-ranging
expertise," says S. Andrew
Josephson, MD, chair of the Department of Neurology at UCSF.
"Together, the Gladstone and UCSF communities provide an ideal
environment to unite all the required disciplines and truly break
new ground in treating neurological diseases."
The donation of $2.5 million by
the Simon Family Trust will help launch this center by providing
support for state-of-the-art infrastructure and seed funding for
innovative multidisciplinary research projects.
"This new Gladstone-UCSF center promises to truly advance the
field of neurological disease research," says Nick Simon, director of the Simon Family Trust
who is also a trustee of Gladstone Institutes. "My family and I
hope that our contribution will help the incredible team of
scientists uncover some of the mysteries behind this very
complicated collection of diseases and make a major impact on
future treatments, which represent one of the most significant
unmet clinical needs at this point in time."
In addition to Akassoglou, key members of the Gladstone-UCSF
Center for Neurovascular Brain Immunology include researchers
Scott Zamvil, Jorge Palop, Bruce
Miller, Lennart Mucke, and
Michelle Arkin, as well as junior
investigators and physician-scientists Jae
Kyu Ryu, Mark Petersen, and
Fanny Elahi. Research in the center
is further leveraged by several national and international
collaborations, including a long-standing collaboration with
Mark Ellisman at the National Center
for Microscopy and Imaging Research at UC San Diego. Additional
members and partnerships will be added as the center develops.
"The intersection of the brain, immune, and vascular systems
represents a new frontier in biomedical research," says Akassoglou.
"I'm very excited by the opportunities for new discoveries created
by this new center, which can fundamentally change the way we think
about neurological diseases and the development of new
therapies."
About Gladstone Institutes
To ensure our work does the greatest good, Gladstone Institutes
focuses on conditions with profound medical, economic, and social
impact—unsolved diseases. Gladstone is an independent, nonprofit
life science research organization that uses visionary science and
technology to overcome disease. It has an academic affiliation with
the University of California, San
Francisco.
Media Contact: Julie Langelier |
Assistant Director, Communications | julie.langelier@gladstone.org
| 415.734.5000
1650 Owens Street, San Francisco,
CA 94158 | gladstone.org | @GladstoneInst
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