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Four interdisciplinary collaborations share mission to demystify devastating brain disorders

The Dan and Diane Riccio Fund for Neuroscience has awarded four teams of UMass Medical School researchers $50,000 seed grants for interdisciplinary collaborations leading to innovative discoveries that deepen understanding of normal brain function and what goes awry in neurological diseases.

Mark Alkema, PhD
Mark Alkema, PhD

Massachusetts natives and UMass graduates Dan and Diane M. (Casey) Riccio, PhD鈥03, established the fund in 2018 with $1 million to support investigation, collaboration and innovation in the neurosciences throughout UMass Medical School and beyond. The grants are administered by the Department of Neurobiology. The Riccios were awarded honorary degrees at the 48th UMMS Commencement in June, in recognition of their commitment to supporting research and training at the Medical School.

Alexandra Byrne, PhD
Alexandra Byrne, PhD

鈥淲e are extremely grateful for the support the Riccio family has provided. This fund has been instrumental in fostering interdisciplinary collaborations into diverse areas of neuroscience, with many of the proposals addressing neurological disease-relevant processes,鈥 said David Weaver, PhD, professor of neurobiology and director of the  at UMass Medical School. 鈥淭he seed grants establish the collaborations and provide data needed to seek federal support for these projects.鈥

Katherine Fitzgerald, PhD
Katherine Fitzgerald, PhD

The NeuroNexus Institute was created to catalyze interactions between interdisciplinary teams of basic, translational or clinician scientists in order to accelerate understanding of brain function and the discovery of innovative therapies for neurological conditions. Many Dan and Diane Riccio Fund for Neuroscience grantees are institute faculty members.

Paul Greer, PhD
Paul Greer, PhD

The grants are supporting two new projects and renewing two previous awards:

鈥淗ow do human microbiota determine neuronal health?鈥 (new)

Mark J. Alkema, PhD, professor of neurobiology and submitting principal investigator, with collaborators Alexandra B. Byrne, PhD, assistant professor of neurobiology; Doyle V. Ward, PhD, associate professor of microbiology & physiological systems; and Beth A. McCormick, PhD, the Worcester Foundation for Biomedical 性闻联播 Chair II and vice-chair and professor of microbiology & physiological systems.

鈥淚nhibiting SARM1-mediated neuronal degeneration鈥 (new)

Alexandra B. Byrne, PhD, assistant professor of neurobiology and submitting PI, with Read Pukkila-Worley, MD, associate professor of medicine, and Paul R. Thompson, PhD, professor of biochemistry & molecular pharmacology.

鈥淕asdermins as biomarkers and therapeutic targets for multiple sclerosis鈥 (renewal)

Katherine A. Fitzgerald, PhD, the Worcester Foundation for Biomedical 性闻联播 Chair III, professor of medicine, vice chair of research for the Department of Medicine, director of the Program in Innate Immunity and submitting PI, with Carolina Ionete, MD, PhD, professor of neurology.

"Characterizing CNS myeloid cells in ALS pathogenesis" (renewal)

Paul L. Greer, PhD, assistant professor of molecular medicine and submitting PI, with Robert H. Brown, Jr., DPhil, MD, the Leo P. and Theresa M. LaChance Chair in Medical 性闻联播 and professor of neurology.