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Grant - Winter 2017 - ALS – Eric Shoubridge, Ph.D.

Eric Shoubridge, at McGill University in Montreal, Québec, was awarded an MDA research grant totaling $287,169 over three years to study a new gene linked to ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).
The recent discovery of mutations in a mitochondrial gene, CHCHD10, in patients with ALS, frontal temporal dementia (FTD) and other motor neuron diseases, implicates mitochondrial pathology as a cause of disease in some patients. CHCHD10 belongs to a family of proteins containing a specific motif that targets it to mitochondria, but its function remains almost completely unknown.
With colleagues, Shoubridge is working to elucidate the normal function of this protein and determine how mutations in it can cause ALS. The team plans to work out the basic biology of CHCHD10 in human cell culture models (muscle cells and skin cells) and to carry out the crucial experiments in motor neurons from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells. They will investigate the composition of CHCHD10 protein complexes, and comprehensively evaluate how mitochondrial function is altered in the face of disease-causing mutations. Finally, they will generate a zebrafish model containing ALS causative mutations, in which researchers will directly be able to evaluate the requirement of CHCHD10 for normal motor neuron function.
If successful, Shoubridge’s work could lead to important insights into the involvement of mitochondria in ALS and reveal new drug targets.
Funding for this MDA research grant began Feb. 1, 2017.
Grantee: Eric Shoubridge, Ph.D.
Grant type: Research Grant
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