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April 2000 UCSF Gets $12 Million NIH Award to Study How Genes Affect Responses to Medicines As the high-profile effort to decipher the human genome nears completion, scientists nationwide are launching another ambitious project this time to learn how variations in genes affect peoples responses to drugs. Differences of a single "letter" among many thousands in the DNA instructions of a gene are thought to often affect drug response. The emerging research, in the field known as pharmacogenetics, is expected to revolutionize the way drugs are designed and tested, boost the effectiveness of drug treatments and cut the likelihood of side effects. A team of more than 20 scientists at UCSF has received an $11.9-million research grant the largest among nine awarded this week by the National Institutes of Health in the first phase of a major new pharmacogenetics research initiative. The national project aims to identify the genetic differences that determine why some people can be successfully treated with a drug while others with the same condition remain unaffected or are even harmed by the drug. The four-year UCSF study involves laboratory and clinical research to determine how natural genetic variation affects the performance of human proteins known as membrane transporters which act as cellular gatekeepers, controlling whether drugs get into the blood stream.
Giacomini, a leader in studies of how transporters affect absorption and elimination of drugs in the body, last year was awarded the Pharmaceutical Scientist of the Year Award by the International Pharmaceutical Federation in recognition of her research. The UCSF project, totaling about $3.2 million in its first year, is funded by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS). It will focus on variants in transporter genes that underlie the response to many frequently used drugs, including responses to antidepressant and anticancer drugs. The project will first determine the amount of variation, -- usually in the form of "single-letter" differences known as single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs -- in the 25 different transporter genes by examining DNA from an ethnically diverse sample of 450 people as well as other study populations. Researchers will then test the performance of these transporter variants in cell cultures, and finally, clinical researchers will determine if people with those variants respond differently to drugs in a clinically significant way. Geneticist Ira Herskowitz, PhD, professor of biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF and a co-leader of the UCSF project, stresses that a rich range of research expertise is needed to determine how genes control drug response. "The excitement of this project is bringing together people with diverse research skills, from pharmaceutical scientists to molecular and population geneticists and clinicians, to tackle questions about how peoples genes influence their response to drugs," he says. Data from the UCSF research and that of the other institutions involved in the NIH-funded study will go immediately into a national database housed and operated by scientists at Stanford University School of Medicine, recipients of a $1.6 million grant for the first year of this project. The Pharmacogenetics Knowledge Base (PharmGKB), as it is being called, will serve as the shared information library for all scientists in the research network to ease collaborative research in this critical emerging field and to speed applications. Links: NIGMS pharmacogenetics research initiative Giacomini Receives Pharmaceutical Scientist of the Year Award UCSF Department of Biopharmaceutical Sciences Source: Wallace Ravven, News Services |
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