2022

Glenn Foundation for Medical Research and AFAR Grants for Junior Faculty


Almada headshot

Albert Almada, PhD

Assistant Professor, University of Southern California

Mis-regulation of Stem Cell Activation Mechanisms Driving Muscle Dysfunction in the Elderly

It is inevitable that our body’s skeletal muscle tissue will gradually deteriorate as we get older. Current work suggests that the inability of stem cells to switch on the muscle-forming program after trauma is a major cause to the loss of muscle mass and strength in the elderly. However, why older stem cells lose the ability to fully restore muscle after injury remains a mystery. Recently, Dr. Almada’s team discovered a new stem cell activation pathway that requires a key (1) enzyme and (2) an essential vitamin, Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide (NAD+), that work together to guide muscle stem cells through the repair process. Considering that NAD(+) levels decline substantially in aged skeletal muscle, in his AFAR supported work, Dr. Almada will explore whether this new NAD(+)-triggered pathway is disabled during muscle ageing; and if re-activating it will kick-start the healing process in in older animals.

More 2022 Recipients of this Grant

Ying Ann Chiao, PhD

The regulation of mitochondrial NAD+ metabolism in the aging heart

Ying Ann Chiao
Carlos Manlio Díaz-García, PhD

Casting light on energy metabolism throughout the anatomy of aging neurons

Carlos Manlio Díaz-García
Ilia Droujinine, PhD

Characterization of adipose tissue-to-muscle communication pathways in aging

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Ryo Higuchi-Sanabria, PhD

Sensing and signaling ER stress from neurons to periphery

Ryo Higuchi-Sanabria
Kevin Murach, PhD

Myc as the Driver of Cellular Epigenetic Rejuvenation in Skeletal Muscle

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Juan Pablo Palavicini, PhD

Functional lipidomics reveals a novel molecular mechanism underlying improved metabolic function and lifespan extension in remarkably long-lived mice

Juan Pablo Palavicini
Daniel Roh, MD, PhD

Delineation of beneficial and detrimental roles of senescent cells in impaired wound healing of aging

Daniel Roh
Judith Simcox, PhD

Discovery of ceramide signaling as a regulator of energy expenditure with aging

Judith Simcox
Anthony Joseph Covarrubias, PhD

The role of senescent macrophages as a driver of inflammaging and altered NAD+ metabolism in aging

Anthony Joseph Covarrubias
Noga Ron-Harel, PhD

Restoring immunity by targeting the aged microenvironment

Noga Ron-Harel