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Grant - Winter 2012 - DD/LGMD - Robert Bloch, Ph.D.

MDA has awarded a research grant totaling $362,295 over a period of three years to Robert Bloch, a professor in the department of physiology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore. The funds will help support Bloch's study of the role of a protein called dysferlin in type 2B limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD2B) and distal muscular dystrophy (DD, or Miyoshi myopathy).
"Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy 2B and Miyoshi myopathy are caused by mutations in the gene that carries instructions for dysferlin, but the role of dysferlin and its location in muscle cells are controversial," Bloch said.
Bloch and colleagues are working to answer these questions by studying isolated muscle fibers from normal and dysferlin-mutant mice, studying the structure and function of intact muscles from these same mice, and comparing what they observe in mouse muscle to muscles of people with LGMD2B or Miyoshi myopathy.
"The state of research in my area is in considerable flux, largely because of problems that have arisen from attempts to translate studies done in isolated cells to what occurs in muscle tissue in a living animal," Bloch said. "We have been trying to bridge this gap and have been getting results that we did not expect based on earlier work from other laboratories.
"It will take us some time to sort out the differences, but once we do so we anticipate making rapid progress."
Funding for this MDA grant began February 1, 2012.
Grantee: DD/LGMD - Robert Bloch, Ph.D.
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