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The Institute for Chemical Neuroscience (iCNS) will receive 23.23 million euros from the government as part of the Gravitation programme. The money will be used for the development of a 'brain atlas' of psychiatric symptoms. This should pave the way to improving the diagnosis and treatment of brain disorders such as depression, frontotemporal dementia and multiple sclerosis. The research will be conducted by a national consortium of universities, UMCs and the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, led by the UvA.
Brain preparation in the lab of the Dutch Brain Bank (photo: Vera van de Donk)
Brain preparation in the lab of the Dutch Brain Bank (photo: Vera van de Donk)

In our society, one in four people suffer from a brain disorder. ‘For many brain disorders, little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying them,’ says consortium leader Inge Huitinga, professor by special appointment of Neuroimmunology at the UvA and head of the Neuroimmunology research group of the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience (NIN-KNAW). 'The relationship between changes in brain tissue and patients' symptoms is very complex. We do not really know which types of cells, which brain networks and which molecular processes cause the psychiatric symptoms and complaints of patients with a brain disease. Some symptoms occur in various conditions and the clinical picture can look very different from patient to patient. For example, someone may have Alzheimer's or frontotemporal dementia, but also develop depressive symptoms. That can lead to incorrect diagnoses.'

Nerve cells (cyan) surrounded by microglial cells (white) in the cerebral cortex (photo: NHI, Viktoir Al-Naqib/Maarten Kole)
Nerve cells (cyan) surrounded by microglial cells (white) in the cerebral cortex (photo: NHI, Viktoir Al-Naqib/Maarten Kole)

Neurobiology, chemistry and AI

‘We think that these psychiatric symptoms are related to changes that occur at the level of individual cells or structures within cells, disrupting brain networks in various brain regions,’ says Paul Lucassen, professor of Brain Plasticity at the UvA. 'The place where nerve cells and supporting cells meet, the so-called synapse-glia interface, is very important. Brain scans have already mapped many global changes in brain tissue, but these techniques are not sensitive enough to see what is happening in the cells on a super-small scale. If you do not know which soft cells and which molecules are changing, you cannot reverse the changes.’

However, all kinds of promising techniques have emerged in chemistry and molecular biology, such as single cell transcriptomics, (chemical) proteomics, advanced microscopy and 'click chemistry'. These could fundamentally change research into the human brain. Neurobiologists, psychiatrists, data scientists and chemists are therefore joining forces within iCNS.

Photo: Netherlands Brain Institute (KNAW), Henk Stoffels
Photo: Netherlands Brain Institute (KNAW), Henk Stoffels

Human material

In contrast to traditional brain research, the researchers in iCNS start with human brain material from the Dutch Brain Bank (NHB). They are also setting up a biobank with cerebral fluid and plasma from living patients with a brain disorder. The molecular brain atlas will be created using so-called multi-omics, which will study sixteen important brain areas of neuropsychiatric disorders in great detail. Using new computer approaches and machine learning models, the researchers will link the multi-omics data to the psychiatric symptoms of around 3,000 NHB donors.

Huitinga: 'We can then use innovative chemical methods to see what has changed when certain symptoms are present and how we can influence or correct this in in vitro and in vivo model systems, such as brain organoids.

Groundbreaking insights

Lucassen: ‘The brain atlas will soon allow us to see exactly which cells and molecules in the brain have changed when symptoms such as anxiety, forgetfulness, impulsiveness or depression are present. We expect that on this basis we can develop innovative diagnostic biomarkers for the diagnosis, prognosis and ultimately treatment of the brain disorders that so many people suffer from.'

Peter-Paul Verbeek, Rector Magnificus of the UvA: 'Society faces major challenges when it comes to our mental health. The large-scale and interdisciplinary approach of the new Institute for Chemical Neuroscience, made possible by Gravitation funding, can lead to groundbreaking insights and these are desperately needed.'

Consortium

The Board of Directors of iCNS is formed by: Inge Huitinga (NIN/UvA), Paul Lucassen (UvA), Mario van der Stelt (Leiden University), Bart Eggen (UMC Groningen), Lot de Witte (Radboudumc) and Maarten Kole (NIN/Utrecht University). The research leaders of the sub-projects are: Jörg Hamann (Amsterdam UMC), Inge Holtman (UMC Groningen), Ahmed Mahfouz (LUMC), Sander van Kasteren (Leiden University), Aniko Korosi (UvA) and Femke de Vrij (Erasmus MC). All involved UvA-scientists are doing research at Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences.

More than 160 Million

In this round of the Gravitation program, a total of seven consortia with scientists from various Dutch universities will receive funding for their research projects. A total of 160.5 million euros will be awarded. In addition to the 'brain atlas' grant, UvA academics will participate in three other consortia: research projects into cybersecurity; electrochemistry for the energy transition; and the use of AI for the design of therapies against blindness.

About Gravitation

The Gravitation programme allows researchers to conduct high-level university research in multidisciplinary collaborations for ten years. One of the pillars of the programme is collaboration across disciplines and universities. The scientists set up scientific research programmes in consortia. The aim of Gravitation is to promote the formation of centres of top-level excellence. The Gravitation programme is administered out by the Dutch Research Council on behalf of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science.