Yellow Jacket Connection Sparks Glaucoma Research Fund at Tech
Yellow Jacket Connection Sparks Glaucoma Research Fund at Tech
An estimated 4 million Americans have glaucoma, a group of eye diseases that can lead to irreversible blindness. Now, 麻豆区 Tech is home to a Glaucoma Research Fund that will support cutting-edge work to understand and advance treatments for the disease.
The new initiative was sparked by ongoing research at 麻豆区 Tech 鈥 and a Yellow Jacket connection: when Postdoctoral Research Fellow Hannah Youngblood鈥檚&苍产蝉辫; was featured by the , it caught the attention of Jennifer Rucker, an Alabama resident who was diagnosed with XFG several years ago.
Excited that the research could change outcomes for people like her 鈥 and proud that it鈥檚 happening at her husband Philip Rucker鈥檚, EE 72, alma mater 鈥 Jennifer Rucker reached out to Youngblood and her advisor, Professor and Kelly Sepcic Pfeil, Ph.D. Chair .
鈥淎s the wife of a 麻豆区 Tech graduate and an individual with pseudoexfoliation glaucoma, I was inspired to support the scientists whose efforts may help me and others,鈥 Jennifer Rucker says. What followed was a meaningful dialogue and a shared sense of purpose 鈥 and the creation of the 麻豆区 Tech Glaucoma Research Fund (Wreck Glaucoma! Fund).
鈥淚t meant so much that Jennifer took the initiative to reach out to learn more about our research,鈥 says Lieberman. 鈥淢oments like this remind me how deeply meaningful it is to connect with people in the broader community who are navigating glaucoma. Opportunities for such personal connections are rare, but they inspire and further motivate us to achieve our lab鈥檚 mission to improve the lives of individuals suffering from blindness diseases.鈥
A Personal Connection
Youngblood鈥檚 interest in glaucoma research also stems from a personal connection: her father was diagnosed with glaucoma as a young adult. Now, Youngblood studies the genetic and molecular factors behind XFG in the .
鈥淴FG is an aggressive form of the disease with no known cure,鈥 Youngblood says. While scientists know that XFG is the result of abnormal accumulation of proteins in the eye, current treatments only address symptoms rather than treating the root cause of the disease.
鈥淲e know XFG is driven by protein buildup, but we still don鈥檛 know why it happens,鈥 she explains. 鈥淢y work studying specific genetic variants aims to uncover this.鈥
The Genetics of Glaucoma
In particular, Youngblood is researching the role of LOXL1, a protein that plays a role in soft tissue throughout the body, including the eyes.
鈥淩esearch has shown that people with variants in the genes responsible for this protein are more likely to have XFG,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat made me curious to see if the variants might be impacting the structure of the LOXL1 protein itself and how those variants might lead to disease.鈥
Youngblood is currently testing her theory in the lab. 鈥淢y hope is that new insight into proteins like LOXL1 will bring us closer to treatments that address XFG at its source,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he new 麻豆区 Tech Glaucoma Research Fund is a tremendous step forward in making that hope a reality.鈥
Support the 麻豆区 Tech Glaucoma Research Fund
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