Welcome
Dr. Karen Usdin and Dr. Pietro Chiurazzi to CFXF's
Board of Scientific Advisors
CFXF
is very proud of the small group of dedicated
researchers that graciously and wisely inform
all our technical decisions. Each of them possesses
a unique professional commitment to finding a
cure for fragile X and as CFXF Scientific Advisors,
they give a bit extra to the fragile X community.
We rely on them to help us make the best decisions
about our research awards and they never let us
down. We are very pleased to start off the New
Year by welcoming our two newest Scientific Advisors,
Dr. Usdin and Dr. Chiurazzi.
Dr. Karen Usdin received her Ph.D. in 1986 from
the University of Cape Town, South Africa. After
doing Post-Doctoral work on gene regulation in
bacteria and a family of endogenous retrovirus-like
elements in mammals, she turned her attention
to the Repeat Expansion diseases, a group of genetic
disorders that includes fragile X syndrome. She
is now a Senior Investigator in the Laboratory
of Molecular and Cellular Biology at the National
Institutes of Health, U. S. A. Her group is investigating
the mechanism responsible for the fragile X mutation.
They are also interested in the molecular basis
of the premature ovarian failure seen in some
female carriers of “premutation” alleles
and the tremor and ataxia seen in some male carriers.
In addition, they are trying to understand the
molecular events that lead to the transcriptional
silencing of the FMR1 gene in people with fully
mutated alleles. Their work involves the analysis
of DNA and RNA structures formed by the fragile
X gene as well as the proteins that bind to them.
Her group has also developed a number of cell
and animal models for studying different aspects
of fragile X syndrome. It is hoped that these
models may provide new insights into the normal
and pathological regulation of the FMR1 gene,
and may one day provide good systems for testing
potential treatments for this disorder.
Born in Rome in 1967, Dr. Pietro Chiurazzi earned
his undergraduate degree in 1992 with a thesis
on the molecular diagnosis of fragile X syndrome.
He earned his M.D. in 1996 at the Catholic University
in Rome, specializing in Medical Genetics with
research on the origin of FMR1 full mutations
in the population (founder effect). He earned
a Doctorate in Genetics in October 2001 at the
Erasmus University of Rotterdam (The Netherlands),
defending a thesis on the in vitro re-activation
of the fully mutated FMR1 gene with DNA demethylating
agents and hyperacetylating drugs. Dr. Chiurazzi
is an
SCIENTIFIC ADVISORS
Robert Bauchwitz, M.D.,
Ph.D. Columbia University
New York, NY
Jason Dictenberg, Ph.D. Yeshiva University
New York, New York
Associate
Member of the Italian Association for Fragile
X Syndrome. Since 1999, he has held a research
position in the Department of Pediatrics at the
University of Messina. In February of 2003, Dr.
Chiurazzi returns to the Institute of Medical
Genetics of the Catholic University in Rome and
will continue his work to find a cure for fragile
X.
MEET DR. YOLANDA
DE DIEGO,
OUR NEWEST GRANTEE
Dr. Yolanda de Diego Otero, from the “Fundacion
Hospital Carlos Haya” research laboratory,
has been working on fragile X since 1993. Her
first contribution was a fragile X screening on
the mentally retarded population in Andalucia
(Southern Spain). This was the main subject for
her doctoral thesis, developed at the University
of Seville where she obtained a Ph.D. in 1997.
Subsequently, she was awarded a grant from the
highly prestigious and competitive European Marie
Curie Postdoctoral Research Programme. She started
to work as research fellow at the Clinical Genetics
Department of the Erasmus University Rotterdam,
under the supervision of Prof. Ben Oostra and
Dr. Rob Willemsen. During the first year her project
was focused on the FMRP and FXRP family localization
in the mouse embryonic development, and the FMRP
transport on the neurites during the second year,
publishing the results in prominent journals.
Molecular and Cellular Biology published her most
recent results.
After two and a half years abroad, she was awarded
another Marie Curie Postdoctoral grant to return
to the University of Malaga (Spain), now on a
new approach, the Oxidative Stress on the Fragile
X mouse model using the FMR1 knockout mouse she
brought from Rotterdam.
Dr. de Diego’s results were focused on
biochemical and pharmacological studies. Initially,
she observed the increase level on the oxidative
stress in the brain and testes of the knockout
mice, as they are the main organs affected by
fragile X syndrome. The next step was to perform
a treatment trial to try the normalization of
the oxidative status. For the trial she used a
neuroprotector antiperoxidative methodology to
treat the mice and to normalize the biochemical
parameters (lipid peroxidation, glutathione level
and antioxidant enzymes). The most striking observation
was the normalization in the testicle size after
one month of treatment. This project was done
in 2001 and after finishing this first part, the
next goal was a psychopharmacological study to
demonstrate the effectiveness of the treatment
in the improvement of the learning and behavioral
deficits observed in the mouse model correlated
with that observed in the patients.
At that time, Dr. de Diego received a position
as a senior investigator at the “Fundacion
Hospital Carlos Haya”, working in the group
led by Dr. Fernando Rodriguez de Fonseca (Head
of the Research Unit and Director of the Foundation).
The group has wide and well-known experience in
neuropsychopharmacological studies as it could
be certified for its articles in high impact journals
such as Nature, Science and the Journal of Neuroscience.
The experience of Dr. de Diego Otero in the fragile
X field, the wide knowledge of Dr. Rodriguez de
Fonseca on Psychopharmacological studies, and
the support of Conquer Fragile X Foundation represent
an extraordinary and fruitful collaboration that
come together in this promising project. Hopefully,
findings from this project will highlight a new
step in drawing a specific treatment for fragile
X patients
Harris Hollin, Founder ~ Karen Fay, Past
President PO Box 37 ~ Walnut Creek, CA 94597 Tel: 925-938-9300 x1 Fax: 925-938-9315 Email:natlfx@fragilex.org Web:www.fragilex.org
NFXF is a not-for-profit tax exempt 501c3 organization Tax ID No 84-0960471
CFXF is a not-for-profit tax
exempt 501c3 organization
Tax ID No 65-0910605