About the Aging Program
The world's 60-and-over population increased by more
than 12 million persons in 1995 alone, reaching a total of 550 million. By the
year 2025, 1.2 billion people will be 60 or older. Improvements in health care
and disease prevention have the potential to create economic benefit to, and
to dramatically improve the quality of life of, millions of individuals. Significant
breakthroughs in understanding the basic biological processes that underlie
aging and age-related diseases are the best hope we have for achieving genuine
prevention or amelioration of age-related debilitation and disease.
The Ellison Medical Foundation
Aging Program supports basic biomedical research on aging relevant to understanding
aging processes and age-related diseases and disabilities. The foundation stimulates
basic biomedical research in multiple disciplines. Specific areas of interest
include, but are not limited to:
- Structural biology
- Molecular genetics
- Studies with model systems ranging from lower eukaryotes
to humans
- Inquiries testing the relevance of simpler models to human
aging
- Genetic epidemiology of aging; candidate longevity genes
- Aging in the immune system
- Host defense molecules in aging systems
- Mechanisms of free radical induced cell aging
- Mechanisms of aging in various differentiated cell populations
- Gene/environment and gene/gene interactions
- Integrative physiology
- New approaches to age-modulated disease mechanisms: Alzheimer's
disease and others.
For further information, contact: Richard L. Sprott, Ph.D. Executive Director The Ellison Medical Foundation 4710 Bethesda Avenue Suite 204 Bethesda, MD 20814-5226 (301) 657-1830 (Phone) (301) 657-1828 (Fax) Contact Dr. Sprott |