Neurological Foundation Announces July Grants
Neurological Foundation Announces July 2010 Grant Round Recipients
The Neurological Foundation of New Zealand has today announced research grants, travel grants and scholarships totalling nearly $750,000 for its July 2010 funding round. The Neurological Foundation is the primary non-government sponsor of neurological research in this country.
Foundation Executive Director Max Ritchie says “This grant round’s recipients continue to demonstrate the highly innovative thinking that enables New Zealand to remain at the leading edge of research into the understanding, prevention and treatment of neurological disorders. Furthermore, this innovation provides hope for the one in five New Zealanders who will be struck with a brain disorder in their lifetime.”
The Foundation awarded a Repatriation Fellowship in the July round - a significant scholarship established to encourage gifted young scientists working abroad to return to New Zealand and continue their careers. “We are thrilled to award the Repatriation Fellowship to Dr Peter Freestone, allowing him to return from a two-year Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship in Rome and foster his promising career on these shores,” Mr Ritchie says. Dr Freestone will study in the Department of Physiology at the University of Auckland upon his return.
The July grants allocated include the funding of the following four Project Grants, and three Small Project Grants (attached):
• a large research project focusing
on the use of MRI to capture changes in the brain associated
with anxiety in people with Parkinson’s disease
• the
exploration of the mechanisms of neuron (nerve cell) death
in Alzheimer’s disease; understanding neuron survival may
lead to potential drug discovery
• the evaluation of
the plasticity of the visual brain areas following injury to
the nerve of sight (optic nerve); potential to inform new
and innovative treatment modalities
• the study of the
endocytosis (the process by which substances are taken into
a cell) of Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs) by
neurons; aiming to provide new insights into
neurodegeneration relevant to Parkinson’s disease
Research project summaries overleaf
The Neurological Foundation is an independent
body and charitable trust and its funding has facilitated
many of New Zealand’s top neuroscientists’ pioneering
breakthroughs. Without the ongoing support of individual New
Zealanders the Foundation could not commit to progressing
research to the high level that it does. Ninety-eight per
cent of funding comes from donations and bequests.
If you would like to know more about the
work of the Neurological Foundation, or if you require
information regarding neurological conditions, contact the
national office on (09) 309 7749 or visit www.neurological.org.nz
Neurological
Foundation Repatriation
Fellowship
Repatriation Fellowships are
intended to support the repatriation of outstanding young
researchers who have recently completed post-doctoral
studies outside New Zealand and who propose to return to New
Zealand and conduct research in scientific fields of
relevance to the Neurological Foundation.
Endocannabinoid modulation of
dopaminergic neurons in the Substantia Nigra pars compacta
– function in health and implications for disease
Dr Peter Freestone, Department of
Physiology
University of Auckland, $88,000
Recent studies discovered that the brain produces its own ‘endocannabinoid’ compounds resembling the action of the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana (cannabis). In many brain regions, endocannabinoids regulate the flow of information between brain cells, yet little is known about their function in dopaminergic neurons, the cells that die in Parkinson’s disease. Evidence suggests that endocannabinoids could be important in the development of Parkinson’s disease, and in its treatment. This study will find out how endocannabinoids interact with dopaminergic neurons and help to evaluate the therapeutic potential of endocannabinoids for Parkinson’s disease.
Specialist Postgraduate Training in
Neuropathology
Dr Clinton Turner, Department of
Anatomical Pathology,
Auckland City
Hospital, $57,000
Neuropathology deals with
diseases of the brain, nerves, and muscle. It is an
important medical discipline that involves diagnosis of a
wide range of diseases including brain tumours and
Alzheimer’s disease. Neuropathology is highly specialised
and requires subspecialty training by doctors who have
already trained in pathology. Currently there is a shortage
of neuropathologists, and only one recognised
neuropathologist is practicing in New Zealand. This
Fellowship will allow Dr Clinton Turner to spend time at the
University of Edinburgh, Department of Neuropathology to
gain additional training in neuropathology. Following this
he will return to New Zealand and undertake diagnostic
practice.
PROJECT GRANTS
Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Anxiety
in Parkinson’s Disease
Dr Toni
Pitcher, University of Otago
Christchurch,
$179,899
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a
neurodegenerative disease that affects 1% of the population
aged over 60. Often people with PD suffer non-motor
disturbances along with the classic motor symptoms. Anxiety
is a common non-motor disturbance reported in PD and can add
significantly to the burden of disease for both the patient
and caregivers. The research team, led by Dr Pitcher, will
be located at the Van der Veer Institute in Christchurch,
and aims to use advanced brain imaging techniques to extend
their knowledge of changes in the brain associated with
anxiety in people with PD. Use of such techniques may be
used in the future to predict treatment response or to
monitor responses to treatment
regimens.
Role of TRPV4 channels
in astrocyte calcium signalling and neurotoxicity induced by
amyloid peptide
Dr Ji-Zhong Bai,
Department of Physiology
University of
Auckland, $116,735
Alzheimer’s disease is a
slow-developing brain disease diagnosed mostly in people
aged over 65 years that affects memory, thinking and
behaviour due to nerve cell (neuron) damage. About 1% New
Zealanders have the disease and the number is increasing. To
explore the mechanisms of neuron death, this study will
investigate the role of a calcium-permeable channel (called
TRPV4 channel) found on the membrane of the star-like
house-keeping glial cells (astrocytes), using in vitro
tissue culture models of rat brain (hippocampus).
Understanding how modulating calcium signalling in
astrocytes affects neuron survival may lead to potential
drug discovery.
Evaluating Alterations in
Striate and Extrastriate Visual Brain Areas Using Structural
and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Patients with
Visual Loss
Dr Benjamin Thompson,
Prof Helen Danesh-Meyer,
Department of
Optometry and Department of
Ophthalmology
University of Auckland,
$107,700
Plasticity, the capacity of
the brain to reorganise itself following injury, is an
exciting and emerging area of research. Functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) allows mapping of brain areas based
on patterns of brain activity. This research will evaluate
the plasticity of visual brain areas following injury to the
nerve of sight (optic nerve). Changes in the brain following
acute stroke to the optic nerve, development of slowly
growing tumours, and glaucoma (a neurodegenerative disease)
will be studied. This study will increase the understanding
of the potential plasticity of the brain that occurs
following injury and consequently inform new and innovative
treatment modalities.
Endocytosis of Advanced Glycation
End products (AGEs) by neurons: new insights into
neurodegeneration
Dr Shamim Shaikh
Department of Anatomy and the Centre for
Brain Research
University of Auckland,
$95,714
Most neurodegenerative diseases are
characterised by the loss of specific neurons in the
disease-specific brain regions and the accumulation of
protein aggregates within neurons known as inclusion bodies.
Studies suggest that accumulation of the pathogenic
compounds Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs) is an
important contributor to the neuronal cell death. The study
aims to investigate how AGEs contribute to these inclusions.
An in-vitro cell-culture model will be used in conjunction
with AGEs prepared in the laboratory and well-established
cellular and molecular techniques to study whether neurons
can internalise AGEs, and if these internalised AGEs can
become part of the inclusions seen within neurons. The
results of the proposed study may provide a major step
forward in understanding the pathways implicated in
neurodegeneration.
SMALL PROJECT
GRANTS
Influence of Chemoattractant
Cytokines on the Differentiation of Adult and Aged Neural
Progenitor Cells
Dr Renee Gordon, Dr
Christof Maucksch
Department of
Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology, and Centre for Brain
Research
University of Auckland, $10,000
Neural progenitor cells found in the
adult brain may provide an exciting therapeutic strategy for
replacing cells lost through brain injury and disease. In
order to achieve this clinically, methods need to be
developed to direct progenitor cells to migrate to specific
areas of cell loss. One signalling system that may be of
importance in this regard is the chemokines and their
receptors. This project aims to advance knowledge regarding
the function of chemokines in the adult brain by
investigating the role chemokines play in directing the
migration and fate of adult neural progenitor
cells.
Cognitive and Neurological
Correlates of Vulnerability to
Depression
Dr Gina Grimshaw, Assoc
Prof John McDowall
Victoria University of
Wellington, $10,000
Depression is a
debilitating mental illness with high emotional, physical,
and financial costs to patients, their families, and
society. Some individuals are predisposed to developing
depression, and can be identified through recordings of the
brain’s electrical activity. Most people have greater
activity over the left than the right frontal areas of the
brain; those who are vulnerable to depression have a
reversed pattern. The goal of this research is to determine
what thought processes are affected by this pattern of
asymmetry, to develop an understanding of how neural
activity can give rise to depression.
Identifying the mechanism by which lithium
chloride directs neuronal differentiation of adult neural
progenitor cells.
Assoc Prof Bronwen
Connor
Department of Pharmacology and
Clinical Pharmacology
University of
Auckland, $10,000
Cell transplantation therapy
offers a viable treatment strategy for patients with a range
of neurological disorders by providing new cells to replace
those lost through disease or injury. One potential cell
source for transplantation currently being investigated is
neural stem cells. Assoc Prof Connor and her research team
have previously shown that treating neural stem cells with
lithium chloride prior to transplantation enhances the
generation of new replacement neurons and accelerates
functional improvement in a rodent model of neurological
disease. This project will extend these findings and
identify the mechanism by which lithium chloride treatment
of neural stem cells promotes neuronal cell replacement and
functional recovery.
ENDS