Pilot Awards
MRA Pilot Awards test potentially transformative ideas that do not have extensive preliminary data but articulate a clear hypothesis and translational goals. Resources for such “high-risk, high-reward” projects are important to establish proof-of-concept, which may then leverage additional funding through more traditional avenues.
Development of Novel YAP-TEAD Inhibitors for Uveal Melanoma:
Seeks to develop a novel, first-in-class drugs for the treatment of melanoma of the eye.
MRA Pilot Award
Fernando Camargo, Children’s Hospital Boston
Mitochondrial Control of Melanoma Initiation:
Aims to delineate how changes to mitochondria, the body’s energy-producing cellular machines, impact melanoma initiation, progression and treatment.
MRA Pilot Award, collaboratively funded by Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Jerry Chipuk, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Blood Vessel Co-option by Brain Tropic Melanoma Cells:
Seeks to better understand how melanoma cells invade the brain via their ability to interact with the brain’s blood vessels, and target this process therapeutically.
MRA Pilot Award
Andrew Dudley, University of Virginia School of Medicine
Spliced Immune Receptors for Immune Regulation and Melanoma Immunotherapy:
Aims to explore the mechanism of action on potential therapeutic applications for a novel immunostimulatory molecule.
MRA Pilot Award
Michal Lotem, Hadassah Medical Organization
Targeting Ferroptosis to Combat Resistant Forms of Melanoma:
To determine whether a novel pathway of cell death can be therapeutically manipulated to kill melanoma cells.
MRA Pilot Award
James Olzmann, University of California, Berkeley