what is the core?
The Core is the world’s first and only partnership between a world-class academic institution and a leading nonprofit organization dedicated to a full-spectrum approach to ALS drug development. Our goal is to develop the first effective treatments, and ultimately a cure, for ALS.
CORE ACCOMPLISHMENTS
THE CORE has made significant progress toward better therapeutic options for ALS. These accomplishments are increasing the number and testing the feasibility of potential ALS therapies, improving possible diagnostic tools in the clinic, and expediting the transition of promising drug candidates into patient populations. Among its achievements, CORE researchers have:
- Tested >1700 chemical compounds and FDA approved drugs for other indications in our in vitro screening unit,
- Collaborated with >20 other academic groups and biotechs to assess their ALS compounds of interest in a range of pre-clinical models,
- Developed a novel blood-based biomarker for ALS, which we are now validating for diagnostic and prognostic purposes,
- Moved two potential ALS drugs, jacifusen and CK0801, to people with ALS, and
- Developed an in-house drug, Prosetin, which can penetrate the brain through straightforward oral administration, measurably rescue stressed motor neurons in all of our ALS models, provably engage a cellular pathway of interest across neurodegeneration.
“For the first time, ALS patients can directly participate in research that will move us toward therapies that actually work…The Core provides an immensely exciting opportunity to capitalize on decades of ALS advances and translate them into meaningful treatments now.”
Neil Shneider, MD, PhD, Director of the Eleanor and Lou Gehrig ALS Center at Columbia
RESEARCH NEWS

New Drug Targets
The Core is the culmination of 20 years of Project ALS research achievements in genetics, stem cell research, and basic research studies. These breakthroughs allow

We Know More Today
Project ALS was the first organization to use stem cells to model human ALS; this practice is now used worldwide. Project ALS scientists also use patient stem cells to screen for drugs.

Uplifting Athletes Grants Project ALS Researcher Young Investigator Award
Uplifting Athletes will honor Project ALS-funded Columbia University researcher Emily Lowry, PhD, with one of its first five Young Investigator Awards. Uplifting Athletes, a nonprofit

Project ALS Sponsors Massachusetts General Hospital Internship To Further The Field
Meet Elizabeth Adelson, a neuroscience student at Yale University whom Project ALS will sponsor this summer, along with 4 other students, for a research internship

How is the TDP-43 Gene Involved in ALS?
An exciting Project-ALS funded study on the involvement of the gene TDP-43 in ALS-frontotemporal dementia. Understanding how TDP-43 contributes to neurodegeneration will help direct therapeutic

Want Better Drugs? Put Them to the Test: Pre-Clinical Core Designed to Rigorously Test Drugs of Promise
The Project ALS Pre-Clinical Core at the Motor Neuron Center at Columbia University is the most recent effort to put drugs through rigorous testing—so that