grant

White matter protection by inhibitors of glial scar formation in perinatal hypoxia ischemia

Organization OREGON HEALTH & SCIENCE UNIVERSITYLocation PORTLAND, UNITED STATESPosted 15 May 2020Deadline 30 Apr 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2024(TNF)-α21+ years oldAdultAdult HumanAnimal ModelAnimal Models and Related StudiesAstrocytesAstrocytusAstrogliaAttentionAttenuatedBlocking AntibodiesBrainBrain Hypoxia-IschemiaBrain Nervous SystemCNS InjuryCachectinCell Communication and SignalingCell SignalingCell-Extracellular MatrixCerebral PalsyCerebrumChildhoodChronicCicatrixClinical TrialsCognitiveDiagnosisDiffuseDiseaseDisorderDuran-Reynals Permeability FactorECMEncephalonEnzyme GeneEnzymesEventExtracellular MatrixFailureFutureGL EnzymeGenerationsGenesHumanHyaglosidaseHyaluronate 4-glycanohydrolaseHyaluronate HydrolaseHyaluronic AcidHyaluronidaseHyaluronoglucosaminidaseIn VitroIntracellular Communication and SignalingLearningLesionLifeMacrophage-Derived TNFMediatingMemoryModelingModern ManMolecularMonocyte-Derived TNFMotorNatural regenerationNeonatalNervous System DiseasesNervous System DisorderNeurologic DisordersNeurological DisordersPathway interactionsPerinatal HypoxiaPhasePremature BirthPrematurely deliveringPreterm BirthProliferatingProtein SubunitsProteinsReactionRegenerationRiskRodentRodentiaRodents MammalsRoleSHAP proteinScarsSignal TransductionSignal Transduction SystemsSignalingSocializationSpinal ColumnSpineSurvivorsTNFTNF ATNF AlphaTNF geneTNF-αTNFATNFαTestingTherapeuticTimeTumor Necrosis FactorTumor Necrosis Factor ActivationTumor Necrosis Factor-alphaVertebral columnadulthoodastrocyte progenitorastrocyte progenitor cellastrocytic gliaastrocytic progenitorastrocytic stem cellastrogliosisattenuateattenuatesbackbonebiological signal transductioncentral nervous system injurycerebralconnectomedisabilityheavy chain inter-alpha-trypsin inhibitorhypoxia/ischemiahypoxic ischemic injuryin vivoinhibiting antibodyinhibitorinjured CNSinsightinter-alpha-inhibitorinter-alpha-trypsin inhibitorinter-α-inhibitorinter-α-trypsin inhibitorkinase inhibitormodel of animalmyelinationneurobehavioralneurological diseaseneuropsychiatric diseaseneuropsychiatric disordernew approachesnew drug treatmentsnew drugsnew pharmacological therapeuticnew therapeutic approachnew therapeutic interventionnew therapeutic strategiesnew therapeuticsnew therapynew therapy approachesnew treatment approachnew treatment strategynext generation therapeuticsnovelnovel approachesnovel drug treatmentsnovel drugsnovel pharmaco-therapeuticnovel pharmacological therapeuticnovel strategiesnovel strategynovel therapeutic approachnovel therapeutic interventionnovel therapeutic strategiesnovel therapeuticsnovel therapynovel therapy approacholigodendrocyte precursoroligodendrocyte progenitoroligodendrocyte stem cellpathwaypediatricpremature childbirthpremature deliverypremature neonatespremature newbornpreterm deliverypreterm neonatepreterm newbornpreventpreventingprogenitorprotein complexprotein piregeneraterepairrepairedresponsesocial rolesrc Kinasessrc Protein-Tyrosine Kinasessrc Tyrosine Kinasessrc-Family Kinasessrc-Family Tyrosine Kinasessubstantia albawhite matterwhite matter injury
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

Project Summary
Survivors of preterm birth are commonly diagnosed with persistent white matter injury (WMI) that leads to a

failure of normal myelination. Myelination failure results in life long motor and neurobehavioral disabilities. The

central feature of WMI is the so-called “glial scar,” an inhibitory barrier generated by reactive astrocytes, which

causes myelination failure by blocking the maturation of oligodendrocyte progenitors. It is our long-term

objective to develop novel therapies to prevent myelination failure by preventing glial scar formation.

There are no therapeutic strategies to prevent early formation of diffuse reactive astrogliosis before it

chronically blocks myelination.

WMI disrupts the integrity of the hyaluronic acid (HA) backbone of the extracellular matrix. We have defined a

novel pathway through which small ~5 kDa HA oligomers (HA5) regulate the proliferation of astroglial

progenitors and promote reactive astrogliosis. Through the enzyme tumor

necrosis

factor-

(TNF)

stimulated

gene-6 (TSG-6), HA5 serves as a sink that traps heavy chain (HC) protein subunits of the inter-alpha-inhibitor

protein (II) complex. This reaction generates unstable intermediates of II that release HC. We have

identified novel approaches to block this TSG-6-dependent pathway to markedly attenuate the formation of the

glial scar. Our over-riding hypothesis is that HA5-mediated HC release promotes reactive astrogliosis

via a src family kinase-dependent pathway. We propose three specific aims to test this hypothesis. In aim

1, we hypothesize that hyaluronidase activation in the glial scar promotes the formation of HA5. We will

determine the hyaluronidases (HYAL) that generate HA5 to promote formation of the glial scar and determine if

a broad spectrum HYAL inhibitor reduces astrogliosis in response to WMI. In aim 2, we will test the

hypothesis that HA5 promotes astrocyte proliferation and reactive astrogliosis through TSG-6-dependent

release of heavy chains derived from II. We will determine if astrocyte proliferation in WMI is dependent on

TSG-6 expression that promotes astrogliosis in vitro and in vivo via an HC-dependent mechanism. In aim 3,

we hypothesize that activation of TSG-6 mediates glial scar formation via activation of src family kinases. We

will first determine if a TSG-6 blocking antibody inhibits proliferation of astrocyte progenitors in vivo. We will

test a src kinase inhibitor, currently in clinical trials, as a novel strategy to block glial scar formation and

promote myelination. At the conclusion of these studies, we expect to define new therapeutic strategies to

intervene during early WMI to prevent formation of the glial scar and promote myelination. Given that reactive

astrogliosis is a central feature of many forms of CNS injury, our findings may have potential benefit for other

pediatric and adult neurological disorders with prominent WMI.

Grant Number: 5R01NS116674-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Stephen Back

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →