Center for Metabolic Origins of Disease Archives - Sanford Burnham Prebys
Institute News

SBP scientists join race for a cure

Authordrobison
Date

March 17, 2016

Andrew Carley, PhD, has a personal motivation for finding a cure for diabetes. As one of the 29 million Americans with diabetes, he became a biomedical researcher to better understand the causes of disease.

For Julio Ayala, PhD, a passion for medical research was sparked by his grandmother, a type 1 diabetic, who at age 86 has successfully managed the disease most of her life.

Julio Ayala, PhD
Julio Ayala, PhD

Siobhan Malany, PhD, is an avid cyclist who believes so strongly in team efforts that she has enlisted robots to join her research team searching for new drugs to fight disease.

On Sunday, March 13, 2016, these Sanford Burnham Prebys scientists took their interest in biomedical research to the roadways of Central Florida as they joined 1,100 participants in the 2016 Tour de Cure at Lake Nona bicycle ride for diabetes. The twelve-member SBP team collectively pedaled more than 400 miles and raised $9,000 to fight the disease. Participants began the 25, 63, and 100-mile courses in Lake Nona Medical City near SBP and the Center for Metabolic Origins of Disease, the site where researchers study diabetes in hopes of identifying new, more effective therapies.

“It was a fun way to give back and do what I love to do.  Cycling has been my commute, my sport and my escape —now it’s a way to contribute,” said Malany, who completed the 100-mile course in five hours. She enjoyed the camaraderie and credited the group with a bit of competitive motivation. “I kept a 21.5 mile per hour pace, which was not something I would have accomplished had I been cycling alone. It was fast and fun being in a pack because you conserve energy by drafting,” added Malany.

Siobhan Malany, PhD
Siobhan Malany, PhD

Since moving to Lake Nona in December from Chicago, Carley has gotten back into cycling and now bikes to the Institute in Medical City each day. He completed a Century ride to mark the 20th anniversary of the Tour de Cure in 2011 in Chicago and decided to mark the 25th anniversary of the event with a 25 mile ride. “I selected the 25 mile course because it was the maximum length of time my 3-year old daughter would remain content in her bike stroller watching a Toy Story movie. She weighs only 32 pounds and the course was relatively flat so we were able to complete the ride in two hours despite frequent stops,” said Carley.

Tour-de-cure

Team captain Ayala participated in various ADA and JDRF fund raising events while at Vanderbilt University. “While riding my bike to work a few years ago, I saw the first Tour de Cure in Lake Nona and knew that I wanted to participate. We study diseases of metabolism at the Medical City site and a number of faculty, including me, receive ADA-funded grants, so I wanted to get involved,” said Ayala.

Ayala credits the team’s spirit with providing extra motivation to push through the extreme winds encountered on the course. It’s with similar determination that they approach their daily race for the cure in their research labs.

Institute News

Leading cardiometabolic researcher to join SBP

Authordrobison
Date

November 5, 2015

The cardiovascular researcher who pioneered visualizing the function of the human heart using the most powerful magnetic resonance available will soon join SBP’s Florida campus. E. Douglas Lewandowski, PhD, will become professor in the Cardiovascular Metabolism Program and director of Cardiovascular Translational Research starting December 2015. He is among the most preeminent investigators in the world who specialize in the metabolic basis of heart failure, including ischemic heart disease and diabetic cardiomyopathy.

“Doug Lewandowski’s pioneering work has unveiled new concepts and therapeutic strategies aimed at improving the treatment of heart failure, a worldwide health problem. He will continue this work at SBP, leading an innovative bench-to-clinic research program at SBP and the Florida Hospital Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes (TRI-MD). His recruitment is transformational for our translational research efforts in the cardiovascular arena,” said Daniel P. Kelly, MD, Tavistock Distinguished Professor and scientific director, Center for Metabolic Origins of Disease at SBP Lake Nona.

Lewandowski’s contributions to understanding metabolic pathways and fuels that may protect against the high-morbidity, -mortality, and economic health burden of heart failure are recognized as among the most rigorous and field-advancing. He is renowned in the use of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to visualize and measure metabolic activity in the intact beating heart in health and disease. His expertise in medical imaging techniques involves manipulation of metabolic activity in the ailing heart with pharmacological agents and targeted gene manipulation.

He will hold a joint appointment at Florida Hospital as senior principal investigator at the TRI-MD. He views the partnership between SBP’s basic research and the TRI’s clinical investigations as an attractive and effective research model that will accelerate the translation of the fundamental mechanisms of heart disease and therapeutic targets toward patient-based studies to identify new treatments, therapeutics, and cures.

“With Lake Nona’s emphasis and existing expertise in cardiometabolic disease, I feel that I can immediately contribute to team science approaches to elucidate fundamental mechanisms of heart and metabolic disease. My focus will be to translate findings in SBP’s laboratories to human studies of the metabolic basis of heart disease at the TRI,” said Lewandowski. “It is this partnership that I anticipate will be a game changer in the way I will be able to implement the translation of my laboratory investigations, and I find this very, very exciting.”

Prior to joining SBP, Lewandowski held the position of professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, in the Department of Medicine, and director of the Program in Integrative Cardiac Metabolism at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Previously, Dr. Lewandowski spent a decade on the faculty at Harvard Medical School with hospital appointments at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, Mass.

Institute News

10 years of studying metabolism, nutrition, and human energy—what have we REALLY learned?

Authorsgammon
Date

August 17, 2015

Every day we read or hear something about a food that is bad for us, a fruit that will help us lose weight, or a supplement that will extend our lives beyond their natural endpoint. Unquestionably, every year a significant amount of money, research, and time is spent exploring the cause and prevention of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and the myriad of other metabolic conditions that affect our health and well-being. But what do scientists think are the truly important things we have learned about our metabolism, diet, and exercise over the last decade?  And how is this leading to the next-generation of medicines to treat metabolic disorders? Continue reading “10 years of studying metabolism, nutrition, and human energy—what have we REALLY learned?”