2023

Glenn Foundation for Medical Research and AFAR Grants for Junior Faculty


Wang Headshot

Qinchuan Wang, PhD

Assistant Professor, John Hopkins University

CaMKII as a cause of age-related sarcopenia

Sarcopenia, characterized by the progressive loss of skeletal muscle strength, mass, and quality, is a significant risk factor for adverse health outcomes in older adults. The signaling protein, CaMKII, is known for its beneficial role in muscle performance. However, recent findings from Dr. Wang's research indicate that excessive CaMKII activity in aging muscles could inadvertently exacerbate sarcopenia, possibly through augmented chronic inflammation. With the support of AFAR, Dr. Wang aims to elucidate the double-edged role of CaMKII in aging skeletal muscles. This research holds the promise of paving the way for precise therapeutic interventions that can counteract aging-associated muscle deterioration, thereby promoting healthier aging.

More 2023 Recipients of this Grant

Cory Baumann, PhD

Role of Human Antigen R (HuR) in Skeletal Muscle Adaptation and Resiliency

Cory Baumann
Daniel Czyz, PhD

The role of monoculture isolates from the human microbiome on aging and stress responses

Daniel Czyz
Ana Daugherty, PhD

Brain Iron-Mediated Effects of Inflammation and Mitochondrial Metabolic Dysfunction on Cognitive Aging

Ana Daugherty
Hilary Grosso Jasutkar, MD PhD

Synaptic Autophagy in Normal Cognitive Aging

Hilary Grosso Jasutkar
Shuo Han, PhD

Regulation of host aging and physiology by the human gut microbiota

Shuo Han
Denis Mogilenko, PhD

Understanding dendritic cells as a driver of immune dysfunction in aging

Denis Mogilenko
Jude Phillip, PhD

Deciphering functional subtypes of senescence at single-cell resolution

Jude Phillip
Jessica Spinelli, PhD

A Novel Strategy to Restore Mitochondrial Function in Aging

Jessica Spinelli
Andrea Stavoe, PhD

Dynamic Regulation of Autophagy during Aging in Distinct Neuronal Types

Andrea Stavoe
Allyson Palmer, MD PhD

Cellular Senescence and Risk of Postoperative Delirium: Applying Proteomics to Identify Potential Therapeutic Targets

Allyson Palmer
Ricardo Martínez Zamudio, PhD

Senescence-driven disruption of monocyte identity in aging humans

Ricardo Martínez Zamudio
Roarke Kamber, PhD

Identification of inter-cellular signaling axes that suppress senescent cell clearance by macrophages

Roarke Kamber
Hiroshi Kumagai, PhD

The novel mitochondrial microprotein PUTZ is a potential therapeutic target for aging-associated sarcopenia and frailty

Hiroshi Kumagai