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Grant - Winter 2018 - Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM) + Pompe disease + CNM/MTM - Marta Margeta, M.D., Ph.D.

“Both autophagy impairment and excessive autophagy activation play a role in many human diseases including cancer and Parkinson disease,” Marta Margeta said. “In the neuromuscular disease field, autophagy impairment plays a role in centronuclear myopathies and lysosomal storage myopathies. Our work has a potential to affect all these disparate research areas.”
Marta Margeta, associate professor of pathology at University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, was awarded an MDA research grant totaling $200,000 over two years to improve understanding of the cellular and molecular pathways by which dysregulation of a process called autophagy impairs skeletal muscle function and leads to muscle injury in sporadic inclusion-body myositis (IBM) and other neuromuscular diseases.
Autophagy is a fundamental metabolic process with many important cellular functions, one of which is to degrade damaged cellular organelles and misfolded proteins whose presence otherwise would lead to cell dysfunction.
Evidence of autophagy dysregulation is present in a number of inherited and acquired skeletal myopathies, including the lysosomal storage disorder Pompe disease (AMD), sporadic IBM, centronuclear myopathies, and inherited as well as drug-induced autophagic vacuolar myopathies. However, the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms are poorly understood.
With colleagues, Margeta is working to uncover the mechanisms by which autophagy dysregulation impairs skeletal muscle function and leads to muscle injury in both in vitro and in vivo models of drug-induced autophagic myopathy.
If successful, this work could facilitate the development of pharmacologic therapies for inclusion body myositis and other autophagic myopathies.
Grantee: Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM) + Pompe disease + CNM/MTM - Marta Margeta, M.D., Ph.D.
Grant type: Research Grant
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