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Understanding Alzheimer’s
Chunyu Wang, assistant professor of biology at Rensselaer,
has received one of 10 New York State Office of Science,
Technology, and Academic Research (NYSTAR) James D. Watson
Investigator Program Awards. The $200,000 grant will support
Wang’s research, which focuses on the application of nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to study Alzheimer’s
disease and other significant problems in neuroscience and
aging. NMR spectroscopy provides a powerful modern analytic
technique for understanding the structure and function of
biological molecules, such as proteins and nucleic acids.
The NYSTAR support will allow Wang’s laboratory to
investigate a key protein-protein interaction in the
development of Alzheimer’s using state-of-the-art NMR equipment
at Rensselaer. Wang is seeking a better understanding of the
disease’s structural mechanisms, and his research may lead to
the development of new treatments for Alzheimer’s, which is the
most common form of dementia in elderly people.
“Professor Wang’s long-term goal is to find a cure for
Alzheimer’s. Contributing to a better understanding of complex
and common diseases is one of the many areas of vital research
under way at Rensselaer’s Center for Biotechnology and
Interdisciplinary Studies,” says Wolf von Maltzahn, associate
vice president for research at Rensselaer.
Wang is a medical doctor who also holds a doctoral degree in
biochemistry and molecular genetics. “Current medications for
Alzheimer’s primarily treat symptoms of the disease instead of
the disease itself. This is partly due to our incomplete
understanding as to how a key peptide, amyloid ß peptide,
interacts with other molecules in brain cells and causes
neuronal dysfunction,” says Wang. “Our research seeks to yield
a comprehensive understanding of how amyloid ß peptide
interacts with an important enzyme, which will lead to the
identification of better options for treating the disease.”
The James D. Watson Investigator initiative is part of the
$22.5 million Generating Employment through New York State
Science (Gen*NY*sis) program.
Originally published in Rensselaer
Magazine, Summer 2005
Photo by Mark McCarty
Published
July 14,
2005
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