ALS Association Greater New York Chapter

 

NeuroLINCS

NeuroLINCS is a collaborative effort between numerous research groups that are experts in their field and have high proficiency in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology, disease modeling, OMICs and computational biology. Specifically, OMICs includes epigenomics (study of gene modifications that do not change the genetic sequence), transcriptomics (study of messenger RNA (mRNA)), proteomics (large-scale study of proteins) and cellomics (quantitative cell analysis). Their focus is to gain a deeper understanding of neuron and the causes of neurological diseases like ALS.

Not only is this study exploring ALS, but also Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA). Both are neurodegenerative diseases that effect motor neuron health resulting in muscle weakness and paralysis. There is no cure for either disease.

The ALS Association Commitment

The ALS Association committed $2.5 million with funding from the Greater Philadelphia Chapter over a five year period. Funding was announced in July 2016. This is a partnership with the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) to extend the current activities of NeuroLINCS, which is one of six National Institutes of Health (NIH) Library of Integrated Network-based Cellular Signature (LINCS) centers.

Goals

NeuroLINCS will investigate cell signatures from iPSCs generated from people living with both ALS and SMA. Currently, the study is analyzing the following 20 iPSC lines: four healthy participants, four people living with SMA, four people living with sporadic ALS, four people living with SOD1 ALS and four people living with C9orf72 ALS, which are the two most common genetic forms of ALS.

Using state-of-the-art methods, the NeuroLINCS program will create a wealth of cellular data that is patient specific. At the end of the study, analysis of the collected datasets will lead to identification of a network of unique cell signatures specific to both ALS and SMA.

The ultimate goal is to understand the commonalities and differences among the various types of ALS and SMA. This will lead to more efficient clinical trials to test treatments in specific patient groups that are more likely to succeed, getting researchers closer to effective treatments and cures. The results from this study will not only apply to ALS but also to SMA, thereby broadening its impact on the neurodegenerative field.

NeuroLINCS and the integrated team contributes significantly to Answer ALS, providing the building blocks and expertise required for the larger study planned for Answer ALS.

How the NeuroLINCS advances the search for a treatment for ALS

  • Develops cell signatures of an array of human brain cell types under both a normal state and in response to chemical perturbations for comparison. A cell signature is a collection of data obtained from a set of tests that involve whole genomic sequencing (reading the DNA of a person’s entire genetic code) and OMICs studies as explained above.
  • Cell signatures are generated from iPSCs of people living with both ALS and SMA.
  • Collaboration is highly emphasized in this program. All data generated will be publically available worldwide.

Key Players

The research laboratories involved include:

  • Steve Finkbeiner, Ph.D., at Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco
  • Ernest Fraenkel, Ph.D. at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass.
  • Jeffrey Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore
  • Leslie Thompson, Ph.D. at University of California Irvine in Irvine, Calif.
  • Dhruv Sareen, Ph.D., Clive Svendsen, Ph.D. and Jennifer Van Eyk, Ph.D. all at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles

Progress

As of spring 2016, some data are available for download from the site, including transcriptomics for all four ALS lines and control lines. Genome sequencing is underway at New York Genome Center.

Website

http://www.neurolincs.org