April 21, 2021

San Diego Nathan Shock Center announces first grant awardees at inaugural training workshop

Six grant recipients received up to $15,000 each for studies on the variability of cellular aging in humans

索尔克新闻


San Diego Nathan Shock Center announces first grant awardees at inaugural training workshop

Six grant recipients received up to $15,000 each for studies on the variability of cellular aging in humans

LA JOLLA—The San Diego Nathan Shock Center (SD-NSC) of Excellence in the Basic Biology of Aging, a consortium between the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Sanford Burnham Prebys (SBP) Medical Discovery Institute and the University of California San Diego, has announced the first class of pilot grant awardees at the center’s inaugural training workshop. Six recipients, each from a different institution, will receive up to $15,000 to pursue research that advances our understanding of how humans age, with the ultimate goal of extending the number of years of healthy, disease-free life (i.e., health span).

Aging is the most significant risk factor for human disease. Individuals age at different rates, and even specific cells and tissues within a person age differently. This depends on intrinsic properties, including where cells are in the body, and extrinsic factors, like environmental exposures to toxins and pathogens. Yet, scientists do not fully understand this variability (“heterogeneity”) and how it contributes to overall human aging, risk for disease or therapeutic responses.

Ana Chucair-Elliot (left), Vanessa Delcroix (middle) and Maria Clara Guida (right)
Ana Chucair-Elliot (left), Vanessa Delcroix (middle) and Maria Clara Guida (right)
点击此处 用于高分辨率图像。.
Credit: Ana Chucair-Elliot, Vanessa Delcroix and Maria Clara Guida

“These exciting research projects are a crucial first step to deepen our understanding of aging heterogeneity, which could pave the way for better interventions to improve human health span,” says Salk Professor 杰拉尔德·沙德尔, who directs the SD-NSC. “We’re thrilled to bring new researchers into the biology of aging field through support from our center and look forward to seeing their progress toward understanding the heterogeneity of aging.”

The six pilot grant awardees are: Ana Chucair-Elliot, staff scientist at Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, “A novel inducible cell-specific mouse model for chromatin accessibility and transcriptomic studies of retina Müller glia in age-related macular degeneration”; Vanessa Delcroix, postdoctoral researcher at The Scripps Research Institute, “A single-cell atlas of the aging lacrimal gland to understand the mechanisms underlying age-associated dry eye disease”; Maria Clara Guida, staff scientist at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, “Investigating the epigenetic drift of aging hearts using Drosophila”; Adam Konopka, assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, “The metabolic-epigenomic network of Metformin and exercise”; Lara Labarta Bajo, postdoctoral fellow at the Salk Institute, “Astrocyte plasticity in the aging brain”; and Maria Mihaylova, assistant professor at The Ohio State University, “Characterizing age-dependent changes in the mammalian colon.”

Adam Konopka (left), Lara Labarta Bajo (middle) and Maria Mihaylova (right)
Adam Konopka (left), Lara Labarta Bajo (middle) and Maria Mihaylova (right)
点击此处 用于高分辨率图像。.
Credit: Adam Konopka, Lara Labarta Bajo and Maria Mihaylova

Grant recipients will receive subsidized access to the SD-NSC Research Resource Cores (shared research facilities), necessary reagents/supplies, and access to training workshops offered by the center and its core research facilities. They will also be paired with an established aging research investigator, who will provide guidance to ensure project success.

The awardees were named at SD-NSC’s first training workshop, held on March 26, 2021. The virtual event drew 91 attendees and featured a keynote presentation from Darren Baker of the Mayo Clinic, as well as introductions to the Center’s three Research Cores: the Heterogeneity of Aging Core, the Integrative Models of Aging core, and the Human Cell Models of Aging core. It was also announced at the workshop that Associate Professor Alessandra Sacco at SBP will join the SD-NSC, replacing SBP Professor Malene Hansen as director of the Research Development Core. Video presentations given at the workshop are publicly available online here.

Research reported in this announcement was supported by the National Institute On Aging of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number P30AG068635. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

研究领域

更多信息

宣传办公室
电话:(858) 453-4100
press@salk.edu

萨尔克生物学研究所

萨尔克研究所是一个独立的非营利性研究机构,由首个安全有效的脊髓灰质炎疫苗的研发者乔纳斯·索尔克于1960年创立。该研究所的使命是推动以合作、敢于冒险为特点的基础性研究,以应对癌症、阿尔茨海默病和农业脆弱性等社会最紧迫的挑战。这项基础科学支撑着所有的转化研究,产生有助于全球新药和创新的见解。.