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University of California, Los Angeles Health Sciences
27-Mar-02
Library: MED
Keywords: AUTISM ASPERGER'S DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDER NEUROLOGY LOS ANGELES
CA
Description: Dr. Daniel Geschwind, UCLA assistant professor of neurology,
has received a five-year, $6M grant from the National Institute of Mental Health
to expand scientific and community groups' efforts to identify the genes that
cause autism.
Contact: Elaine Schmidt,
elaines@support.ucla.edu
(310) 794-2272
For Immediate Use: March 22, 2002
UCLA Neurologist Awarded $6 Million to Search for Autism Genes
Dr. Daniel Geschwind, UCLA assistant professor of neurology, has received a
five-year, $6 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to
expand scientific and community groups' efforts to identify the genes that cause
autism.
Geschwind and his UCLA colleagues will direct the project, in partnership with
the citizens' group Cure Autism Now, to add 300 more families to Cure Autism
Now's Autism Genetic Resource Exchange (AGRE) gene bank. They will share the
information and samples gathered in the study with the research community
through AGRE and a repository maintained by the National Institute of Mental
Health Human Genetics Initiative.
"This project will break frontiers in the scope of its collaboration and data
sharing with the entire scientific community," said Geschwind, a member of the
Center for Neurobehavioral Genetics at UCLA's Neuropsychiatric Institute. "We
hope it will also create a promising model for other genetic studies, in order
to speed identification of important genes and unlock the mysteries of autism
and other devastating hereditary disorders."
The Cure Autism Now Foundation created the AGRE gene bank in order to advance
genetics research on autism. AGRE collects DNA samples and clinical data from
families with more than one member diagnosed with one of three genetically
related diseases: autism, pervasive developmental disorder (PDD) and Asperger's
syndrome.
Autism begins in early childhood, impairing thought, feelings, language and the
ability to relate to others. While its causes and effective treatments have
eluded science, evidence suggests that the disorder is highly heritable.
Researchers suspect the disease stems from interactions among multiple unknown
genes - complicating the challenge to pinpoint its origin. Recent genome scans
have identified several chromosomal sites that may harbor genes possibly
predisposing individuals to the disease.
Geschwind is director of UCLA's Neurogenetics Program - a group of clinical
scientists and neurologists who apply molecular genetic methods to understand
the basic mechanisms of neurological disease and to care for their patients.
His collaborators include Drs. Stanley Nelson, Rita Cantor and Kenneth Lange
from UCLA; Dr. J. Conrad Gilliam from Columbia University; and Drs. Christa Lese
and David Ledbetter from the University of Chicago.
-UCLA-
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