$13M Grant Fuels Innovative RNA Pollution Research to Combat Neurodegenerative Diseases

April 27, 2026
$13M Grant Fuels Innovative RNA Pollution Research to Combat Neurodegenerative Diseases
  • The project tests the hypothesis that age-related RNA pollution accumulating in neurons, combined with predisposing genetic mutations, drives neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and ALS, and aims to reverse neurodegeneration by eliminating this RNA pollution.

  • The goal is to slow age-dependent RNA dysregulation to confer resilience against neurodegeneration, potentially leading to new therapies that protect millions from these diseases.

  • The overarching hypothesis is that mitigating age-related RNA dysregulation can confer neuronal resilience even with pathogenic genetic variants, potentially shifting treatment toward proactive cellular rejuvenation.

  • Key personnel include co-principal investigators Douglas Galasko and Jerome Mertens, Alex Chaim, Fred “Rusty” Gage, and Anne Bang, spanning UC San Diego, Salk Institute, and Sanford Burnham Prebys.

  • Key collaborators, led by Gene Yeo at UC San Diego, include Galasko, Mertens, Chaim, Gage, and Bang, forming a cross-institution team.

  • Promising candidates will be tested in 3D brain tissue models called iSpheroids and later in animal models to evaluate potential effectiveness in humans.

  • Leading therapeutics will be evaluated in iSpheroid models that mimic brain tissue architecture, bridging cell culture and in vivo studies for efficacy and safety before advancing.

  • The project exemplifies state support for high-risk frontier science in regenerative medicine, aiming to alter the trajectory of chronic brain diseases through discovery and clinical research.

  • Robotics-enabled high-throughput screenings will identify thousands of potential treatments, including FDA-approved small molecules and targeted RNA therapies, that can reduce RNA pollution and restore neuronal health.

  • The screenings will assess thousands of compounds for their ability to clear RNA pollution and rejuvenate neuronal function, prioritizing candidates with translational potential due to prior safety data.

  • The collaboration among UC San Diego, Salk Institute, and Sanford Burnham Prebys has secured a four-year, $13 million CIRM grant to explore reversing age-related neurodegeneration by eliminating RNA pollution in aging neurons.

  • The project aligns with CIRM’s DISC4 portfolio, a broader $80 million commitment to six California researchers pursuing foundational science with translational potential in regenerative medicine.

Summary based on 3 sources


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