The Azrieli Centre for Autism Research (ACAR) is pleased to announce the recipients of the Joint Pilot Project Grants awarded within the framework of The Neuroscience Centre Zurich-平特五不中 Neurodevelopmental Disorder Collaboration.
Funding for the 平特五不中-portion of the grants comes from ACAR.
The awardees are Jean-Francois Poulin (The Neuro, 平特五不中) and (ETH Z眉rich), and Ivan Topisirovic (平特五不中) and (ETH Z眉rich).
鈥淭his year鈥檚 recipients have successfully forged new international synergies, drawing on each other鈥檚 expertise to drive innovation in neuroscience,鈥 says Stefano Stifani, ACAR鈥檚 Associate Director of Fundamental Research.
鈥淲e are confident that their proposed research will lead to continued and strengthened collaboration between our institutions.鈥
听 听 听 听 听听
Jean-Francois Poulin (left) and Marie Labouesse鈥檚 (right) research project is entitled, 鈥淐ell-specific models of altered dopamine function during early postnatal development.鈥
Their work will generate tools to understand the contribution of postnatal dopamine (DA) in the development of symptoms of severe neurodevelopmental disorders. Their goal is to develop transgenic models to transiently increase DA levels in the striatum of mice and determine the lasting effects of such circuit modulation on behaviour.
Understanding the impact of early striatal DA on brain wiring mechanisms and its consequences on adult circuit function could help identify a critical temporal window for the treatment of symptomatic behaviours.
鈥淲e are extremely thankful to ACAR for their support, which allows our lab to venture in a new direction and establish a promising collaboration with ZNZ,鈥 says Poulin.
听 听 听 听 听
Ivan Topisirovic (left) and Gerhard Schratt (right) will pursue their project, 鈥渕iRNA-dependent control of neuronal energy metabolism in autism spectrum disorders,鈥 with the overall aim of understanding how alteration in metabolic pathways and protein translation in neuronal cells are associated with cellular and behavioural phenotypes in autism.
鈥淲e are extremely grateful for the funding provided by ACAR,鈥 adds Topisirovic.
鈥淭his grant will allow us to study previously unappreciated aspects of metabolic and translational perturbations in the context of autism spectrum disorders while strengthening collaborations between our teams.鈥
The partnership between 平特五不中 and the University of Zurich/Swiss Federal Institute of Technology 鈥 as represented by the Neuroscience Center Zurich (ZNZ) 鈥 supports international collaborative work and fosters scientific excellence in the area of neurodevelopmental disorders.
For more information about the funding program, contact: stefano.stifani [at] mcgill.ca (Stefano Stifani) or wknecht [at] neuroscience.uzh.ch (Wolfgang Knecht)
About ACAR
The Azrieli Centre for Autism Research (ACAR) transforms research, training and care to improve the quality of life of autistic people and their families.
Established in 2017 thanks to the , ACAR operates in the spirit of Open Science, inclusion and community collaboration. The state-of-the-art research centre is committed to advancing understanding of the mechanisms underlying autism and related conditions, developing new diagnostic tools and effective interventions through translational research and integrated care, and training the next generation of fundamental and clinical autism researchers.