Dr. Thomas Pulinilkunnil, assistant professor in 麻豆传媒 Medical School鈥檚 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, recently received a national Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) grant 鈥 the first one ever awarded in New Brunswick.
The $300,000 investment into Dr. Pulinilkunnil鈥檚 work will help his team continue fundamental research into diabetes triggered by obesity.
鈥淲hen people are obese and also have diabetes, their heart cells become sick,鈥 says Dr. Pulinilkunnil.
鈥淟ike every living thing, heart cells dispose and recycle waste. But when in an obese and diabetic environment, they can鈥檛 keep up with the garbage removal and recycling process. This leads to heart failure.鈥
New drug target discovered
In his 麻豆传媒 Medicine New Brunswick laboratory, Dr. Pulinilkunnil discovered a protein that helps heart cells get rid of waste more easily.
鈥淟ike a housekeeper hired to clean up the mess, we鈥檝e discovered a new drug target that helps heart cells to efficiently clean up junk that surrounds them,鈥 explains Dr. Pulinilkunnil.
鈥淯sing the CDA funds, my research team will begin screening for small molecules that act on this target, which can then can be commercially developed by pharmaceutical companies.鈥
To advance fundamental understanding of diabetic heart disease and the drug target they identified, the team is currently doing studies in human heart samples.
鈥淥ur goal is to improve the quality of life for individuals suffering from obesity-related diabetic heart complications,鈥 says Dr. Pulinilkunnil.
He鈥檚 also hoping to attract more people to his Saint John lab.
鈥淲ith our research ramping up to the next phase, the aim is to recruit and train more highly-qualified students, postdoctoral fellows, and research technicians and associates to New Brunswick,鈥 says Dr. Pulinilkunnil. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a good cardio-metabolic research team here, but we鈥檙e always looking for more trainees and collaborators.鈥