The Fox Focus Fall/Winter 2019 | Page 4

2 Fox Focus | Research This Investor Is Spurring Scientists to Race for a Game-changing Parkinson's Research Tool In September, The Michael J. Fox Foundation (MJFF) launched the “Ken Griffin Alpha- synuclein Imaging Competition.” This $10-million program, funded in part by a leadership gift of $7.5 million from Ken Griffin — founder and CEO of the Chicago- based global investment firm Citadel — holds potential to transform Parkinson’s drug development. Griffin is a dedicated philanthropist, supporting organizations committed to furthering education, civic engagement and the arts, and health. In his philanthropy, as in business, he embraces calculated risk to create value. “I've often thought of successful entrepreneurs as individuals who have just the right expertise — at just the right moment — to solve the emerging problems of their time,” he says. PHOTO COURTESY OF CITADEL Announced through a Fortune news story, Ken is now partnering with MJFF to bring this philosophy to the pursuit of a vital Parkinson’s research tool: an imaging tracer to visualize the key protein alpha-synuclein in the living brain. Nearly everyone with Parkinson’s has clumps of the alpha-synuclein protein in the brain. Scientists believe this clumping harms cells and results in symptoms of Parkinson’s. To this day, these clumps are visible only through post-mortem tissue analysis. This is a foremost challenge in diagnosing the disease and monitoring its progression. The ability to visualize alpha-synuclein in the living brain would open entirely new avenues in research and care. (A similar tool to image beta-amyloid has been a game-changer in Alzheimer’s research over the past several years.)