$3 million grant recognizes potential of research at the UNMC Center for Neurovirology and Neurodegenerative Disorders

Dr. Howard Gendelman Receives Prestigious Javits Investigator

Award from the National Institutes of Health

Howard Gendelman, M.D., an internationally renown neuroscientist at

the University of Nebraska Medical Center, has received the Jacob Javits

Neuroscience Investigator Award from the National Institute of Neurological

Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a division of the National Institutes of

Health.

The Javits Award is the most prestigious honor bestowed by the NINDS

in support of biomedical research on the brain and is awarded to only the

most outstanding neuroscientists in the country. It will provide approximately

$3 million in funding in support of Dr. Gendelmans research over the next

seven years. The award is made in two segments an initial four-year award

with an additional three years of support after internal administrative

review.

The Javits Award is a tremendous honor. Dr. Gendelman is very productive

and is viewed as a leader in his area of expertise, said Al Kerza-Kwiatecki,

Ph.D., program director for infectious diseases of the nervous system at

the NINDS.

I think the Javits Award sends a strong message that UNMC is making

impressive strides in its research efforts on neurodegenerative disorders,

said Harold M. Maurer, M.D., UNMC chancellor. It is among the best in

the nation, and we are very proud of this accomplishment. The fact that

a large portion of the proposed work will come from alternative sources

other than fetal cells demonstrates the commitment and progress made by

our scientists.

The criteria for the Javits Award is that it is given to distinguished

investigators who have a record of substantial contribution on the cutting

edge of neurological sciences and who can be expected to be highly productive

for a seven-year period.

Dr. Gendelman was recognized for his many discoveries in brain research,

notably how the brains immune system works in normal circumstances and

how it becomes altered during neurodegenerative disorders such as AIDS-related

dementia and Alzheimers disease. Dr. Gendelman has developed novel therapeutic

efforts based on improving normal brain function in disease and reversing

brain cell injury during disease. The research looks at how immune cells

get into the brain from blood, effect brain function and the means to reverse

the process.

The NINDS Advisory Council, which bestowed the Javits Award on Dr. Gendelman,

was especially enthusiastic about his breadth of scientific disciplines

and discoveries.  Eight distinct approaches for studying the brain,

in health and disease, are used in Dr. Gendelmans research, including

cell lines, tissue culture methods, animal model systems and, most important,

cells obtained from rapid brain autopsies.

The use of fetal cells from elective abortions by the UNMC Center for

Neurovirology and Neurodegenerative Diseases (CNND) has been the focus

of a statewide controversy the past 16 months. This is the first public

health service funding that the Gendelman team has received in which rapid

autopsies are used to address important scientific questions involving

the brain.

The review panel was particularly enthusiastic about such approaches,

calling the research outstanding and stating that the outcome is likely

to be of immense importance. It further stated: The unique nature of

this experimental approach and the track record of the investigator suggest

that the proposal be viewed favorably.

Dr. Gendelmans grant received an extraordinarily high score, ranking

in the top 1  percent of all grants reviewed by this national committee.

Hes continuously very innovative in his grant applications and consistently

scores very high on his scientific merits, said Dr. Kerza-Kwiatecki. It

puts a stamp of approval that we trust the quality of his research enough

that we believe he will continue to be productive over the next seven years.

Thats quite a benefit to give a scientist this kind of vote of confidence,

as its very time consuming to make scientists submit new documentation

every couple years so their progress can be monitored.

Dr. Gendelmans center is doing everything possible to try to find

alternative sources, said Samuel Cohen, M.D., Ph.D., professor and chairman

of the Department of Pathology and Microbiology. A ban on fetal cell research

would prevent the continuance of this research in Nebraska and would be

a devastating loss to the university and to the Nebraska patients and students

that we serve. This research holds tremendous promise for advancing treatments

against neurodegenerative disorders.

The rapid brain autopsy program, one important focus of this work, was

developed last year by UNMC as a possible mechanism for procuring the three

types of brain cells used in UNMCs research into neurodestructive diseases

such as Alzheimers disease and AIDS-related dementia. For the cells obtained

from a rapid brain autopsy to be suitable for research, the autopsy must

be performed within two hours of a persons death.

Astrocytes, microglia and neurons make up the three types of cells needed

for UNMCs research into neurodegenerative diseases. Astrocytes and microglia

are the support cells for neurons and constitute the brain tissue. Neurons

are the most critical cells for brain function. They work to receive and

send out electrical signals throughout the body and are instrumental for

normal thinking and motor function.

Dr. Gendelmans research team has been successful in obtaining astrocytes

and microglia from rapid autopsies. Only a handful of institutions in the

world have ever been able to successfully isolate cells from rapid autopsies,

and no institution has been able to recover mature neurons from the rapid

autopsy procedure. UNMC has committed more than $400,000 to this program.

This award is a terrific milestone and is shared among all our scientists,

said Dr. Gendelman, the David T. Purtilo Distinguished Professor of Pathology

and Microbiology and director of the CNND. It is a great testament to

the support of UNMC and the citizens of Nebraska for our research.

The Javits Award is named in honor of the late Sen. Jacob Javits (R-NY),

who was a victim of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a degenerative neurological

disorder also known as Lou Gehrigs disease. Sen. Javits was a strong advocate

for support of research in a wide variety of disorders of the brain and

nervous system.

This marks the second major award received by Dr. Gendelman in the past

year. Last March, he was named a J. William Fulbright Research Scholar,

the most prestigious honor bestowed by the Fulbright Program.

As a Fulbright Research Scholar, Dr. Gendelman served as a scientific

ambassador for the United States, studying nerve regeneration for eight

months at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. The Weizmann Institute

is considered one of the leading centers in the world in neurosciences

research especially investigation into how nerve cell damage in the spinal

cord and brain can be regenerated.