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Funded Studies

The Foundation supports research across basic, translational and clinical science to speed breakthroughs that can lead to the creation of new treatments and a better quality of life for people with Parkinson's disease.

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Previously funded studies appear chronologically, with the most recent appearing first.

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  • Dyskinesia, 2011
    The Nur77/RXR Transcriptional Complex as a New Target in L-Dopa-induced Dyskinesia Treatment

    Objective/Rationale:
    Transcription factors are nuclear proteins that regulate gene expression. They are likely to play an important role in long-term molecular maladaptive processes such as those...

  • Rapid Response Innovation Awards, 2011
    Informing Clinical Decision Making in the Pre-motor Period of Parkinson Disease

    Objective/Rationale:
    Currently, the diagnosis of Parkinson disease (PD) relies on recognition of impaired movement, which occurs decades after neurodegeneration begins. By looking at changes in sleep...

  • Rapid Response Innovation Awards, 2011
    Development of Dopaminergic Cell Line Models of Alpha-synuclein Expression for High-throughput Drug Screenings and Monitoring of Alpha-synuclein Expression

    Objective/Rationale:
    Parkinson’s disease (PD) affects millions of people in the United States, and it is caused by the death of neurons that produce dopamine. A large body of experimental evidence...

  • Resource: Utilizing DATATOP Biospecimens, 2011
    Validation of Alpha-synuclein Oligomers as Biomarker for Parkinson’s Disease

    Objective/Rationale:
    We have reported recently higher levels of α-synuclein oligomers species in cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) from patients clinically diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease (PD) versus...

  • MJFF Research Grant, 2011
    Modulation of Striatal Colinergic Neuronal Activity in LID

    Objective/Rationale:
    The role of striatal cholinergic interneurons (ChIs) in Parkinson’s disease and side effects of treatment like levodopa-induced dyskinesia (LID) have been poorly studied. We have...

  • MJFF Research Grant, 2011
    The Role of Serotonergic and Dopaminergic Mechanisms and their Interaction in L-DOPA Induced Dyskinesias

    Objective/Rationale: 
    Our group has previously shown that brain cells that normally produce serotonin, by taking up L-dopa and then releasing dopamine in an uncontrolled fashion, play a crucial role...

Two female doctors talking in the lab.

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