• Press Release

Mount Sinai Researcher Receives Career-Starter Research Grant for 2012-2013

Hirofumi Morishita, MD, PhD, receives a Career-Starter Research Grant for 2012-2013 from the Knights Templar Eye Foundation.

  • New York
  • (June 20, 2012)

Mount Sinai School of Medicine researcher Hirofumi Morishita, MD, PhD, has received a Career-Starter Research Grant for 2012-2013 from the Knights Templar Eye Foundation.

Dr. Morishita, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Neuroscience, Ophthalmology, Friedman Brain Institute and the Child Health and Development Institute at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, was awarded the grant for his work entitled, "Molecular and Circuit Based Therapeutic Strategy for Amblyopia." The grant of $60,000 was given to Dr. Morishita on June 2.

"Our long-term goal is to identify key regulatory mechanisms of plasticity to provide therapeutic targets for Amblyopia," said Dr. Morishita. "We recently identified a novel 'molecular brake' called Lynx1 which increases in adulthood to actively limit plasticity in mouse visual cortex. The removal of this brake was sufficient to restore visual function of ambyopic animals, implying that the adult brain may have hidden mechanisms of plasticity."

A 'lazy eye' or monocular cataract early in life results in an enduring loss of visual acuity (amblyopia) reflecting aberrant circuit remodeling within the primary visual cortex. Amblyopia affects two to four percent of the human population and exhibits little recovery in adulthood. Successful therapies for Amblyopia are therefore contingent on understanding the mechanism of adult brain plasticity.

The objective of the study is to uncover molecular and circuit mechanisms of the adult plasticity normally masked by this molecular brake. The identified mechanisms will provide novel targets for multiple interventions in amblyopia.

Dr. Morishita received his PhD from Osaka University after Psychiatry residency at National Center Hospital of Neurology and Psychiatry in Tokyo and medical school training at Kyushu University. Before joining Mount Sinai, he was a postdoctoral research fellow at Takao Hensch lab, Children's Hospital Boston, Harvard Medical School. His postdoctoral work led to the preclinical discovery of therapeutic strategies for functional recovery in adulthood.

The Knights Templar Eye Foundation supports research that can help launch the careers of clinical or basic researchers committed to the prevention and cure of potentially blinding diseases in infants and children. They support clinical or basic research on conditions that can or may eventually be treated or prevented.

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