The 2019 Gordon Research Conference on Epithelial Differentiation and Keratinization (GRC-EDK)
Grantee: Valentina Greco, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
Amount: DKK 146,536
Grant category: Education and Awareness Grants
Year: 2018
Geography: USA
The 2019 Gordon Research Conference on Epithelial Differentiation and Keratinization (GRC-EDK) is the premier international meeting in epithelial biology since 1979. It showcases the latest conceptual and technological advances in epithelial biology bridging basic and translational research.
This 2019 meeting entitled “Innovations in basic and translational epithelial biology” aims to bring together preeminent speakers at the forefront of epithelia development, stem cell biology, cell biology, pathology and therapy.
The main objective is to discuss latest developments and generate synergistic approaches towards future discoveries and therapeutic prospects. To ensure this, over 30% of speakers are from outside the immediate field, 50% did not speak in the 2017 meeting, and over 30% will be selected from submitted abstracts. Finally, a power hour will open a debate on ways to recognize and tackle discriminations in science.
Trainee mentorship will be promoted through the 4th Gordon Research Seminar on Epithelial Differentiation and Keratinization (GRS-EDK), immediately preceding the GRC-EDK. GRS meetings are organized and featured by trainee scientists providing a unique opportunity to discuss their research and develop life-long collaborations.
The GRS-EDK will also feature a career mentoring panel discussion with emphases on transitioning to independence, careers in academia versus industry, and the importance of gender and racial diversity within science. Collectively, this GRC/GRS will move forward cutting-edge research in the area of skin biology, promote translation of key research findings to clinical practice, and further the careers of early stage investigators to maintain the highest level of innovation of this field in the future.
Skin Proteomic Atlas – a spatially and cell-type resolved landscape of protein expression in the human skin
Grantee: Matthias Mann and Beatrice Dyring-Andersen, University of Copenhagen
Amount: DKK 100,000
Grant category: Education and Awareness Grants
Year: 2018
Geography: Denmark
The skin is an amazing and complex organ that comprises multiple layers and cell types that are functionally distinct.
The aim of this study is to characterize the molecular composition of the healthy human skin by creating an atlas of all the proteins expressed in healthy skin as a function of their spatial location as well as its major cell types.
This atlas, comprising the identification of a global proteomic composition of human skin, will provide an important resource to the community studying the physiology and cell biology of the skin and serve as a basis for future studies comparing the proteomes of inflammatory and oncologic skin diseases.
Publication of the skin atlas will be accompanied by a freely accessible and well-advertised web page portal where information on proteins of interest and their protein profiles in the layers of the skin will be easily available.
LEO Foundation Skin Immunology Research Center
Grantee: University of Copenhagen
Amount: DKK 250,000,000
Grant category: Standalone grants
Year: 2018
Geography: Denmark
Diseases of the skin affect a quarter of the population, more than a billion people, at any given time. Despite impressive progress, especially in the area of immunology in skin diseases, the pace of innovation is not sufficiently high and new treatments are slow to reach patients.
Here, we propose to create a LEO Foundation Skin Immunology Research Center (Skin Immunology Center) that will become a beacon for skin research in Denmark and worldwide.
The Center will identify key questions relating to disease heterogeneity, new pathological mechanisms, and novel therapies of inflammatory skin diseases. With the ultimate aim of helping people with skin diseases in the best possible way, we will launch a focused effort employing cutting edge technologies to advance biological insights and translate basic discoveries to ‘proof of principle’ and then to ‘first in man’ applications (‘bench-to-bedside’). Importantly, observations and questions arising in the clinic will be taken back to the laboratory (‘bedside-tobench’). This team science concept and ecosystem with seamless translation and back-translation between basic biology and the clinic will animate the spirit of the Center from day one.
The Skin Immunology Center will be headquartered at the 12th floor of the Mærsk Tower, the new flagship building at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen.
We will bring together the immunology of the skin, its diseases and comorbidities, ‘omics’ technologies, experimental models, and strong clinical integration to develop new stratification paradigms and therapies towards precision medicine. People will form the basis of the success of the Center and we will both empower existing scientists and strategically hire new talent. We will build a pipeline of future top researchers through excellent educational activities. In this way, the Center will incubate and form a new generation of multidisciplinary skin immunology researchers, ready to reshape the field for decades to come.
From the start, we will collaborate across specialties, institutions and geographies. The Skin Immunology Center will aim to have a total of 60 members in the core member research groups when fully operational, a critical mass allowing it to contribute significantly to raising the level and quality of research and education in inflammatory skin diseases.
The existing LEO Foundation Center for Cutaneous Drug Delivery will become an associated and collaborating partner. The Skin Immunology Center will integrate and advance basic and clinical science approaches to skin disease and develop future leaders in the field, while increasing knowledge and awareness of skin and skin diseases among medical professionals, patients and the public.
Bloom Festival 2019
Grantee: Svante Lindeburg, Golden Days
Amount: DKK 500,000
Grant category: Education and Awareness Grants
Year: 2018
Geography: Denmark
Bloom – at the core:
Bloom is an innovative festival about science and nature, which enlighten us on the Universe, the World and Ourselves. Framed in the lush Søndermarken at Frederiksberg in the heart of the capital city of Denmark, where some of the World’s greatest scientists, poets and philosophers have found inspiration through history, Bloom emerges each Spring as a sensual, experimental and thought-provoking festival version of natural sciences.
Prepared and communicated by some of the brightest scientists, thinkers, and artists of our time from here and abroad. By uniting the best from the world of festivals with the best from the scientific world, Bloom arm wrestles with Life’s greatest questions and over two days invite the audience to debates, talks, laboratories, conversations and nature walks under open skies.
Investigating the tumor suppressive functions of Notch signaling during skin cancer initiation and progression
Grantee: Sunny Y. Wong, Assistant Professor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Amount: DKK 2,486,354
Grant category: Research Grants in open competition
Year: 2018
Geography: USA
Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the world’s most common cancer and is defined by uncontrolled activation of the Hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway.
Although previous studies have suggested that elevated Hh may be sufficient for BCC formation, mutations in the Notch pathway are also commonly observed. Furthermore, Notch-deficient mice are susceptible to forming BCCs, and our recent studies have shown that Notch can modulate tumor-drug response.
These studies seek to understand whether Notch affects multiple aspects of BCC tumorigenesis. Using a combination of animal studies and human BCC specimens, we will investigate how Notch modulates tumor progression and stem cell origin.
We will also model in mice a recent clinical trial, where Alzheimer’s patients treated with a Notch inhibitor reported increased incidence of BCC. We hypothesize that Notch may suppress tumorigenesis at multiple levels by controlling cell differentiation, apoptosis and turnover, similar to its function in normal skin and hair follicles.
These studies will ultimately build on the novel premise that BCCs may originate from a precursor lesion. Given that Notch mutations are the most commonly observed genetic aberrations in human skin, a deeper understanding of the tumor suppressive properties of this pathway is urgently needed.
Characterizing the disease memory in atopic dermatitis
Grantee: Patrick M. Brunner, Medical University of Vienna
Amount: DKK 2,920,541
Grant category: Research Grants in open competition
Year: 2018
Geography: Austria
Atopic dermatitis (AD), the most common chronic inflammatory skin disease, typically starts very early in life.
While many patients outgrow their disease, some develop chronic disease for the rest of their lives. Mechanisms responsible, however, are completely unknown, and no biomarker exists that can predict the course of the disease.
Thus, we want to compare skin from young adults that have outgrown their AD, with skin from patients with active disease (namely normal appearing AD under topical glucocorticoid treatment, which can be expected to flare up again after cessation of treatment, thus harbouring a “disease memory”).
Skin from healthy control subjects will serve as baseline comparators. Due to low immune cell numbers in this type of tissue, we want to use in vivo suction blistering of AD patients to obtain (i) skin resident immune cells and (ii) skin proteins. Suction blister fluid will be analysed with low cytometry and single cell RNAseq (for cells) as well as a proteomic multiplex assays (OLINK) for soluble proteins. The blister roof (i.e. the epidermis) will also be harvested, and keratinocytes will be stored in liquid nitrogen for functional experiments.
Results obtained from flow cytometry, single cell RNAseq and proteomic approaches will then be used for such functional in vitro experiments (e.g. co-culturing, skin equivalents, stimulation experiments) in future research projects.
Overall, we hope that the identification of cellular and/or molecular factors influencing the natural course of AD could possibly identify targets for novel therapeutic approaches in AD, that could induce long term remission – or even lead to a cure – of AD.
Compartmentalized and Systemic Interactions of the Skin Microbiome in Cancer Immunotherapy Response
Grantee: Julia Oh, Jackson Laboratory, Farmington, Connecticut
Amount: DKK 2,107,529
Grant category: Research Grants in open competition
Year: 2018
Geography: USA
My vision is to use metagenomics to better predict patient responses to immunotherapy and rationally design microbial adjuvant cocktails and engineered microbes to improve therapeutic outcomes.
However, a central question is the role of the local microbiota vs. systemic effects in potentiating these immunotherapeutics. In skin cancer, we have been studying how the skin microbiome affects predisposition and progression. Specific gut microbes have been implicated in the outcomes for immunotherapy response in melanoma skin cancer, supporting a role of systemic immune interactions via the gut in potentiating immunotherapy response.
However, because many aspects of cutaneous immunity are compartmentalized from systemic immune effects, we hypothesize that the skin microbiome could uniquely impact skin cancer outcomes during immunotherapy by modulating the cutaneous immune milieu.
The LEO Foundation Award 2017 – Silver Award
Grantee: Dr. Christoph Schlapbach
Amount: DKK 500,000
Grant category: LEO Foundation Awards
Year: 2017
Geography: Switzerland
The Silver Award went to Dr. Christoph Schlapbach, dermatology resident at the University of Bern in Switzerland.
“It is a great honour for me to receive the LEO Foundation 2017 Silver Award on behalf of my emerging research team. Together with the generous financial support, this prize motivates and supports our journey towards a better understanding of how the human skin functions,” said Christoph Schlapbach.
The LEO Foundation Award 2017 – Gold Award
Grantee: Dr. Maria Kasper
Amount: DKK 1,000,000
Grant category: LEO Foundation Awards
Year: 2017
Geography: Sweden
The Gold Award went to Dr. Maria Kasper, presently leading a research group at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.
“Receiving the phone call with the news of the LEO Foundation 2017 Gold award is one of these few unforgettable moments. My friends often call me “skin nerd” since I love everything about skin. Thus, it’s such a happiness and great honour for me to receive this prestigious prize. I would like to express my deepest thank you to the LEO Foundation, the ESDR, and my lab members who make everyday’s work fun and colorful,” said Maria Kasper.
GLP-1R signaling in T cells in relation to psoriasis
Grantee: Carsten Geisler, Professor and Head of Department, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen
Amount: DKK 2,000,000
Grant category: Research Grants in open competition
Year: 2017
Geography: Denmark
Recent studies of patients with psoriasis and type 2-diabetes have shown intriguing results: administration of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) analogues was found to improve the severity of psoriasis. In another study, while not finding a significant beneficial effect of a GLP-1 analogue on disease score as compared to placebo, patients did report a significant decrease in their disease score as compared to baseline.
This has led a Denmark-based group to team up for further investigation of the effect of GLP-1 analogues on psoriasis, based on, among others, an assumption of a direct effect of GLP-1 analogues on the immune system – with the intention of clarifying if there may be a route to new treatment options for psoriatic patients.
More specifically, the team will investigate if the potential immunoregulatory effect of GLP-1R signalling on T cells in psoriatic plaques could be responsible for the patient-experienced alleviation of psoriasis. The team furthermore hypothesizes that vitamin D may play an important role in GLP-1R signaling and is important for alleviation of psoriasis as Vitamin D upregulates GLP-1R on T cells and low serum levels of vitamin D have been reported in psoriatic patients.
The majority of the experiments will be performed by Anna Kathrine Obelitz Rode under supervision of Martin Kongsbak-Wismann and Carsten Geisler, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Copenhagen. Lone Skov, Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen will be co-supervisor on the project. The project will be performed in close collaboration with Charlotte Menné Bonefeld, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Copenhagen.
The clinical studies in humans will be performed at the Department of Dermatology and Allergy, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen in collaboration with Lone Skov.