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Description
PROJECT SUMMARY – OVERALL
Brain glucose metabolism and neuronal excitability are interdependent, and so brain metabolism is the
biochemical basis of cognition, memory, and behavior. Dysregulation of glucose and glycogen metabolism in
the central nervous system are implicated in numerous disorders, including Alzheimer’s Disease, epilepsy,
Parkinson’s disease, and brain injury, but the mechanistic connections between brain metabolism and disease
are poorly understood. The University of Kentucky College of Medicine has made significant investments over
the last few years in investigators with metabolic and metabolomics expertise and instrumentation to support
their research efforts, which has enhanced existing strengths in neuroscience, cancer, cardiovascular, and
diabetes and obesity research. The University of Kentucky (UK) proposes to establish a unique
multidisciplinary Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) on Brain Metabolism (BrainMet) as a
strategically designed, sustainable framework that promotes leading-edge research focused on the role of
metabolic mediators of brain function and disease. The proposed interdisciplinary center leverages highly
specialized expertise in glucose biology, neuronal signaling, mitochondrial metabolism, systems neuroscience,
and data sciences as well as the presence of advanced metabolomics and imaging capabilities to create an
integrated research framework focused on CNS metabolism. The overarching goals are to strengthen UK’s
neuroscience research enterprise by providing a thematically focused multidisciplinary infrastructure dedicated
to defining the contribution of metabolism to brain function and neurological diseases and to use this novel
platform to develop promising and highly-skilled, early-stage investigators in an exciting and potentially
impactful area of brain research. To accomplish these goals, we will meet four specific aims: (1) Develop a
critical mass of funded investigators with research programs directly related to the COBRE’s unifying theme;
(2) provide strong team-based mentoring combining basic and clinical expertise; (3) recruit new investigators to
the COBRE in multidisciplinary areas of neurologic dysfunction through pilot project grant and recruitment
support enhanced by institutional commitments; and (4) create synergy among research projects via critical
links to strong research centers and core facilities at UK, including existing COBREs. Emerging synergies will
be developed through four research projects, an Administrative Core, critical research cores in Metabolomics
and Digital Pathology imaging, all linked by strong biostatistics/ bioinformatics support, all of which are critical
to the proposed studies and will contribute to the development of institutional resources. The scientific focus of
the four research projects is brain metabolism interactions with neurological disease, spanning basic and
translational perspectives. This concentration of multidisciplinary expertise focused on widely recognized but
understudied metabolic mechanisms of neurological diseases promises significant new understandings of
brain metabolism overall. BrainMet has the potential to create a critical mass of skilled scientists who are well
equipped to lead research on brain metabolism into the future.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 5/15/23 → 2/29/24 |
Funding
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
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Projects
- 1 Finished
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Center of Biomedical Research Excellence in CNS Metabolism - Administrative Core
Sullivan, P. (PI), Bachstetter, A. (CoI), Bauer, B. (CoI), Dutch, R. (CoI), Hubbard, W. (CoI), Johnson, L. (CoI), Nikolajczyk, B. (CoI), Norris, C. (CoI), Patel, S. (CoI), Schmitt, F. (CoI), Selenica, M.-L. (CoI), Slevin, J. (CoI), Wilcock, D. (CoI) & Yamasaki, T. (CoI)
National Institute of General Medical Sciences
5/15/23 → 2/29/24
Project: Research project