S A N F O R D - B U R N H A M
Partnering with Michael J. Fox Investing in the Future Making it Personal
M E D I C A L
R E S E A R C H
I N S T I T U T E
VOLUME 1 NUMBER 2 | SPRING 2011
FOUNDERS
Upcoming Events 1
Dr. William H. and Lillian Fishman
Discovering the Future
2
A Message from Blair Blum
4
Partnering with Michael J. Fox
5
HONORARY TRUSTEES
Roberta and Malin Burnham Joe Lewis Conrad T. Prebys T. Denny Sanford TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
Gregory T. Lucier
Talking with a Donor 6 Talking with a Scientist
7
Investing in the Future
8
Planned Giving
9
CHAIRMAN
Recent Events
John C. Reed, M.D., Ph.D.
External Relations Profile 12
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER PROFESSOR AND DONALD BREN CHIEF EXECUTIVE CHAIR
Kristiina Vuori, M.D., Ph.D.
Scientists of Tomorrow 13 Partners in Science
PRESIDENT PROFESSOR AND PAULINE AND STANLEY FOSTER PRESIDENTIAL CHAIR
SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, EXTERNAL RELATIONS
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER TREASURER
Elizabeth Birlet, M.A. Stephanie Boumediene, M.P.H. Edgar Gillenwaters Philip Graham, M.B.A. Chris Lee, M.B.A.
Margaret M. Dunbar SECRETARY
EX-OFFICIO
Raymond L. White, Ph.D. SCIENCE ADVISORY BOARD CHAIRMAN
Back Cover
Blair Blum
Gary F. Raisl, M.B.A., Ed.D.
Arthur Brody Shehan Dissanayake, Ph.D. M. Wainwright Fishburn, Jr. Pauline M. Foster David F. Hale Jeanne Herberger, Ph.D. Brent Jacobs James E. Jardon II Robert J. Lauer Robert A. Mandell Nicolas C. Nierenberg Douglas Obenshain Peter Preuss Stuart Tanz Jan Tuttleman, Ph.D., M.B.A. Andrew J. Viterbi, Ph.D. Carl Ware, Ph.D. Bobbi Warren Allen R. Weiss Gayle E. Wilson Diane Winokur
10
VICE PRESIDENTS, EXTERNAL RELATIONS
Elizabeth Gianini
VICE PRESIDENT, GOVERNMENT RELATIONS
Kristina Meek, M.A.
ON THE COVER
PORTAL EDITOR
Sanford-Burnham invests in the future, as illustrated by our campus in Lake Nona, opened in 2009. Read more on page 8.
Patricia Fuller
www.sanfordburnham.org
Toll-free: 1-877-454-5702
CONTRIBUTOR
Creative Fusion DESIGN
Sanford | Burnham Medical Research Institute 10901 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037 • 858.646.3100 Sanford | Burnham Medical Research Institute at Lake Nona 6400 Sanger Road, Orlando, FL 32827 • 407.745.2000 Sanford | Burnham Medical Research Institute at Santa Barbara 2324 Life Sciences Building, University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, CA 93106 • 805.453.0259
UPCOMING EVENTS
APRIL 21, 2011
Bring It! Rock On for Stem Cell Research A contestant rocks out at Bring It! Orlando.
Sanford-Burnham invites you to Bring It! April 21 in San Diego. This gameshow-themed experience is filled with wacky trivia and fearless displays of hidden talent.
Long Live
Proceeds will support stem cell research for victims of spinal cord injury. Tickets and sponsorships are available by calling Chelsea Luedeke at 858-795-5239. Visit www. sanfordburnhamevents.org/bringit for more information.
JUNE 5, 2011
President’s Circle Save the date for this President’s Circle event to be held in La Jolla. President’s Circle members are those donors who contribute $1,000 or more annually. Stay tuned for details!
Stay up-to-date about our events by following us on Twitter: @SBI_Events.
www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
1
Discovering the Future During 2011 we invite you to join us in celebrating the Institute’s 35th anniversary. This year, we will celebrate our achievements, which were made possible, in part, by our donors, and envision what the next 35 years might hold. By becoming involved with SanfordBurnham you can help us discover that future. As we move forward, the Institute is intensifying its focus on translational medicine. In November, we introduced the Art Brody Innovation Fund, which provides strategic funding to optimize Sanford-Burnham discoveries for development into drugs and diagnostics. In December, along with Florida Hospital, we began a new collaboration with Takeda Pharmaceutical to develop drugs that target obesity (more on page 8). In January we announced a partnership with drug maker Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals (Johnson & Johnson) to develop medicines for Alzheimer’s and neuropsychiatric disorders. These developments are just the beginning; research being conducted today has the potential to challenge disease and revolutionize human health. The Institute has been blazing trails and achieving scientific breakthroughs since its founding in 1976. Our publications were cited more often in peer-reviewed biology and biochemistry journals between 1999 and 2009 than any other organization worldwide. Sanford-Burnham research has led to more than 600 patents and generated more than 90 agreements with strategic partners.
2
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
The Institute has grown geographically as well. The Vascular Mapping Laboratory led by Dr. Erkki Ruoslahti, and the Center for Nanomedicine, led by Dr. Jamey Marth, are located in Santa Barbara. The Institute’s newest facility, the Lake Nona campus, is at the heart of Orlando, Florida’s burgeoning “Medical City.” It is home to the Institute’s Diabetes and Obesity Research Center, headed by Dr. Dan Kelly. The future looks even brighter. In just the past few months, researchers have created a peptide (a piece of
T. Denny Sanford and Malin Burnham, the two dedicated philanthropists and friends for whom the Institute is named, are men of vision—always looking to the future.
Picture the world in 35 years, in 2046, and how different life might be for people living with diseases. a protein) that makes tumors more permeable to treatment, gained new insights into diabetic heart disease, learned how muscle stem cells could be used to treat muscular dystrophy, investigated ways to attack cancer at its roots by targeting cancer stem cells, and much more. In 2010, Sanford-Burnham researchers produced more than 300 peer-reviewed papers. Please visit our blog at http://beaker.sanfordburnham.org, updated frequently, to learn about many other developments. We can only imagine how researchers will continue to build on what we have already learned. Picture the world 35 years from now, in 2046, and how different life might be for people living with diseases. Several diseases that plague us now will very likely be eradicated. This anniversary will be marked by celebration. We will be letting you know about exciting events and philanthropic opportunities, so keep in touch.
Imagine for yourself how you would like to see the future of medical research. Be a part of it here at Sanford-Burnham. www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
3
A Message from Blair Blum It has been more than a year since the Burnham Institute for Medical Research underwent its transformation to SanfordBurnham Medical Research Institute. The change was prompted by the receipt of an unprecedented $50 million gift from T. Denny Sanford, in response to our $100 million, tenyear fundraising goal. It is largely thanks to donors that our scientists are able to make such an impact on human health. This year, the Institute celebrates 35 years of success, and we are looking ever forward. We are blazing trails from innovative laboratory research to life-changing treatments and cures for patients.
“I offer my sincerest thanks to all those who have donated and who will continue to do so in the future.�
In this issue we recognize all of the donors who gave in 2010. We are humbled by the length of this list, but know that there is always room for our community of supporters to grow. I offer my sincerest thanks to all those who have donated and who will continue to do so in the future. I hope to see many of you at upcoming Institute events. New discoveries will continue to unfold at Sanford-Burnham, and there is virtually no limit to what can be achieved. Please join us in our quest to challenge disease and revolutionize human health. Thank you.
Blair Blum
Senior Vice President, External Relations
SAVE THE DATE FOR OUR
35TH Anniversary Gala Mining for the Cure
October 15, 2011 | La Costa Resort and Spa | Carlsbad, California 4
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
Partnering with
Michael J. Fox Dr. Stuart Lipton recently received a grant from the Michael J. Fox Foundation. The opportunity to be associated with this high profile foundation working to eradicate Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a great honor. Our commitment is to raise $106,000 in philanthropic support. By helping us meet this goal, you can be a part of this remarkable partnership. Founded by the actor well known for roles on television’s Family Ties and the Back to the Future movie trilogy, the Michael J. Fox Foundation is highly selective. In a grantee, the Fox Foundation looks for “the ideas that are most readily translatable into new treatments, the teams that can execute those ideas, thoughtful and realistic work plans, and outcomes that can take us closer to our goal: delivering better treatments and, ultimately, a cure.” Dr. Lipton, director of the Institute’s Del E. Webb Neuroscience, Aging and Stem Cell Research Center, received the grant for a study titled Qualitative Analysis of S-Nitrosylated Proteins. His co-principal investigator for the project is colleague Dr. Tomohiro Nakamura. The research team will study how free radicals contribute to PD. Free radicals are highly reactive chemicals that attack molecules by capturing electrons and thus modifying their chemical structures. In this case, they cause critical proteins to malfunction. The goal of the study is to demonstrate changes in specific proteins in PD brains. The study could reveal new disease biomarkers and novel therapies. Dr. Lipton is a highly accomplished researcher. His laboratory’s achievements
include the development of Memantine, the most recent therapeutic to be approved for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Under Dr. Lipton’s leadership, Sanford-Burnham was selected by the NIH and NIEHS as one of three national centers of excellence in neurodegenerative diseases research. While Sanford-Burnham holds an impressive track record for securing federal grant funding for its research—at a time when that funding is ever more scarce—grants from private foundations can propel research in specific areas. Our association with this highly respected foundation not only increases Sanford-Burnham’s profile as a leader in seeking cures for PD, but may one day solve the riddle of this debilitating disease. Your support will ensure that this study reaches its full potential. Join us! To support this promising project, please use the envelope enclosed in this issue of Portal, call us at 1-877-454-5702, or e-mail Jane Langer at jlanger@sanfordburnham.org. To learn more about Dr. Lipton’s work, please visit www.sanfordburnham.org/lipton.
www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
5
TALKING WITH A DONOR
In thinking about the future of a non-profit organization like Sanford-Burnham, one wonders how—or even if—the next generations will participate in philanthropy. Will they be as generous with their time, talent and treasure as their forbearers? Those who are now in college or just entering the workforce have the power to help build a future with more freedom from disease, and there is reason to hope that they recognize this potential. Carolyn “Lindy” Humber has a promising future ahead of her, both in her budding professional career and as a philanthropist. She graduated last spring, on the Dean’s list, from Boston College, where she studied psychology and neuroscience. Lindy recently toured the Lipton lab at SanfordBurnham. Stuart Lipton, M.D., Ph.D. is the director of the Del E. Webb Neuroscience, Aging and Stem Cell Research Center and Program Director for Neurodegenerative Diseases. “Dr. Lipton’s lab blew me away!” Lindy recalls.
The Future of Philanthropy:
Lindy Humber
Having grown up in a philanthropic family, Lindy’s experience with Dr. Lipton inspired her to make a gift to the lab. “I’ve been incredibly fortunate in that I’m able to donate to foundations and organizations. Giving has been a large part of my life,” she says. Lindy’s parents, Kent and Candace Humber, were so pleased with their daughter’s generosity that they matched her gift through the Rancho Santa Fe Foundation. Lindy elaborated, “Dr. Lipton is brilliant and the research he’s conducting on Alzheimer’s and autism is a necessity. I trust in his research and know that it is some of the most advanced in the field. It’s criminal when discoveries and innovations as crucial as Dr. Lipton’s are cut short because of funding issues.”
Of the 51 million members of Generation Y in America, more than half are giving to charity, according to a 2010 study by Convio. Lindy believes that her peers are no different from people of any age when it comes to giving. “People tend to donate more when they can relate to a cause directly,” she says. If you are interested in getting to know a researcher or exploring Sanford-Burnham firsthand, we can arrange it. Please contact us and be part of the future that will benefit Lindy’s generation and those still to come.
6
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
TALKING WITH A SCIENTIST
Making it Personal: Dr. Hudson Freeze Basic researchers may understand the inner workings of a human body as well as anyone, but it’s not often they meet the person that inhabits that particular body. Initally, all Dr. Hudson Freeze first knew of John Taylor “Rocket” Williams III was a few cells. The cells were sent to Dr. Freeze by the young boy’s pediatrician, who needed the researcher’s help with a difficult diagnosis. Dr. Freeze is a glycobiologist – he studies sugars and how they alter protein function in the cell. He is especially interested in a group of rare diseases called Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG). “There was very little training in medical schools for glycobiology,” he recalls, “so when patients started to turn up with these diseases there was no place for these physicians to go. They were forced to come to the basic researchers. That’s pretty different.” His office is adorned with photos of children. “These are my kids,” he says proudly. In the case of Rocket, Dr. Freeze began a relationship with the child’s family that continues today, bringing hope to other families. After Dr. Freeze diagnosed Rocket’s CDG, the boy’s parents paid him a visit. “They asked ‘is there a therapy’? and I said ‘no,’ and then they shifted, rather unexpectedly to ‘what are the big questions in the field that need attention?’ So I talked about that, and his mom said, ‘what would it take to get that going?’” With that, the seeds were planted for what is now The Rocket Fund. At SanfordBurnham’s recent Rare Disease Symposium,
Dr. Freeze announced the official launch of the expanded Rocket Fund, which will enable donors to direct their gifts to research on rare childhood diseases including CDG. Caring for children comes naturally to Dr. Freeze. Growing up with a developmentally delayed sister inspired him to help disabled children. “My dad once said to me that I always said I wanted to help kids like my sister, and I said I’d forgotten that, and he said ‘Well, you were eight years old.’ So there was a foundation there for what I do today.” Over 30 million Americans are affected by “rare” diseases, many of which strike in childhood. When asked to imagine what might be accomplished in rare disease research over the next 35 years, Dr. Freeze answered, “I think we’ll have discovered the causes of most rare diseases. We may not have treatments for all of them, but the origin of the treatments will come from people continuing to explore the basic science.” Understanding the cause of disease is the first major hurdle to treating it, and your support of the Rocket Fund can speed that understanding.
www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
7
Investing in the Future A view from Lake Nona
Dr. Dan Kelly showed Governor-elect Rick Scott around the Lake Nona facility.
Sanford-Burnham invests in the future, and nowhere is that illustrated more clearly than at our Lake Nona campus in Orlando, Florida. A recent visit by Florida Governor-elect Rick Scott, and a new partnership among Sanford-Burnham, Florida Hospital and Takeda Pharmaceutical to discover obesity drugs, illustrate how Sanford-Burnham is shaping tomorrow. Rick Scott visited the Lake Nona campus in December 2010, wrapping up a five-day statewide tour to discuss jobs and economic development. Speaking about the power of collaboration and teamwork that helped Florida attract SanfordBurnham to open its East coast campus in Orlando in 2007, the governor-elect observed “a win-win attitude characterized by people who get things done.” More than 200 business and civic leaders attended the town hall-style meeting in our auditorium. The discussion focused on the job opportunities being created at the emerging life science cluster in Orlando’s Medical City, which is anchored by Sanford-Burnham. Trustee Jim Jardon said, “We were honored to have Governorelect Scott choose us as the site from which to address his future plans for the state. It is fitting, since Sanford-Burnham is at the epicenter of the blossoming Medical City in Central Florida, the research leader and a catalyst to future discoveries and cures.” Dr. Daniel Kelly, scientific director of Sanford-Burnham at Lake Nona, showed the governor-elect around the campus and explained his research on energy metabolism in muscles, Continued on Page 12
8
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
“Our scientists are world-class at identifying targets for drug discovery, devising creative strategies for tackling diseases, and beginning the process of translating our findings toward clinical applications. But we look to biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies to finish the job.” — CEO Dr. John Reed
Planned Giving
in Support of Sanford-Burnham What impact would you like your planned gift to have on the future?
The Gleicher Family
“Their hard work is helping to discover cures with potential to touch us all, either personally or through a family member or friend. My hope is that through my efforts and financial support I can make a difference in improving the health and well being of others, as well as saving people’s lives.” — Alan Gleicher “I lost the love of my life, Phyllis, to Alzheimer’s disease. I want to keep her memory alive, so I have chosen to leave an estate gift to SanfordBurnham to support scholarships for young scientists in search of a cure.” — Mel Clause
Phyllis and Mel Clause
Marge and Bruce Morrice
“We lost my wife Marge this year after an eight- year battle with lung cancer. We established the Morrice Family Innovation Fund at Sanford-Burnham several years ago to support cancer research. We fund it with annual gifts of cash, which will be supplemented by a gift of an IRA account at the end of my life’s journey.” — Bruce Morrice
To discuss a planned gift please contact Patty Fuller at (858) 795-5231. www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
9
Recent Events
Sanford-Burnham has been busy as usual, welcoming friends and supporters at a variety of events. Here are a few highlights. Officials from the City of Goleta, CA, where the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) is based, visited the Center
for Nanomedicine. The Center is a collaboration
between Sanford-Burnham and UCSB. Visitors marveled at a demonstration of 3-D imaging technology inside the AlloSphere, the only facility of its kind.
Dr. John Reed recapped his State
of the Institute address,
previously given only to employees, for members of the President’s Circle on January 27. He reviewed highlights of an extraordinarily productive year and outlined the goals of the Institute for 2011 and beyond.
Members and residents of Lake Nona Country Club were invited to an intimate event at the Institute’s Orlando facility in February. Dr. Kristiina Vuori spoke about the work the Institute is doing in cancer research, and the Florida Breast
Cancer Foundation presented grants to two postdoctoral fellows, Preeti Bharaj, Ph.D. and Fangfei Li, Ph.D.
10
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
The Honorable Eric Shinseki, Secretary, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, recently visited the expansive V.A. construction project at Lake Nona’s “Medical City” in Orlando, Florida. While visiting the emerging life science hub, the Secretary toured the Sanford-Burnham laboratories.
Forty-seven runners participated in this year’s Walt Disney World Marathon as part of Team Sanford-Burnham. Each runner was challenged to raise $2,500 for medical research.
www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
11
External Relations Profile: Elizabeth Birlet Elizabeth Birlet assumed the position of Vice President, External Relations in December. Based at Sanford-Burnham’s Lake Nona location in Orlando, she leads the Institute’s East Coast philanthropic fundraising operation. Ms. Birlet brings a strong background in philanthropy and has held senior positions over the past 20 years at academic research institutions across the nation, including the University of California, San Diego, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Most recently, she was Director of Investor Philanthropy for the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle. She has a master’s degree in journalism with a focus on biomedical science from the University of Illinois. Ms. Birlet has had a busy first few months getting to know many of Sanford-Burnham’s supporters and becoming acquainted with leaders in Orlando’s civic and business communities. If you have the opportunity to visit the Lake Nona campus or attend any of the Institute’s Orlando events, please say hello to her! She is an avid tennis player and gardener and looks forward to doing both in Florida.
Continued from Page 8
Investing in the Future and how this research is yielding insights into the obesity problem that currently plagues our nation. On December 28, Sanford-Burnham announced a partnership with Florida Hospital and Takeda Pharmaceutical to investigate obesity, a growing worldwide health problem. The partnership leverages the three organizations’ strengths in basic biomedical research, clinical research, and drug development to identify obesity-related biomarkers and other targets with therapeutic potential. Only through collaboration can SanfordBurnham’s groundbreaking research be translated into new therapies. As CEO Dr. John Reed said in a recent interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune, “Our scientists are world-class at identifying targets for drug discovery, devising creative strategies for tackling diseases and beginning the process of translating our findings toward clinical applications. But we
12
PORTAL | www.sanfordburnham.org
Takeda Pharmaceutical officials presented Sanford-Burnham and Florida Hospital scientists with a “Daruma,” a traditional Japanese doll that symbolizes good luck and perseverance, to commemorate their newly formed research partnership.
look to biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies to finish the job.” The partnership is the first corporatesponsored research undertaken by SanfordBurnham at Lake Nona. “This research partnership is a collaborative model that capitalizes on the synergistic expertise of each group” said Dr. Kelly.
SCIENTISTS OF TOMORROW
Mutant Worms
What if you got to work with worms every day? Malene Hansen, Ph.D., a scientist at Sanford-Burnham not only gets to work with them, she mutates them. That might sound a little strange, but she and her team could discover something in a tiny worm called C. elegans that could teach us something about human beings.
Each issue of Portal will include an article written for middle school to high school-aged students. Please share this article with the youth in your life, and help us encourage the scientists of tomorrow.
Dr. Hansen is a Principal Investigator—that means she runs her own lab—who has been working at Sanford-Burnham for three years. She works with a team of scientists from all over the world. Canada, Germany, Denmark, Taiwan, China, and the U.S. are all represented in Dr. Hansen’s lab. Together, the team studies aging. You probably know that when people get older, their bodies change and they are more likely to get diseases like cancer or Alzheimer’s disease. Worms get old too, only they do it much faster. C. elegans only live two to three weeks. That means the scientists can more quickly watch a lot of worms go through their whole life cycle. Even more convenient, the worms are transparent. So, under the microscope, the scientists can see what is going on inside them. Dr. Hansen and her team make changes, or mutations, to certain genes in the worm. When they change these specific genes, the worms’ aging process works differently, and sometimes they live up to twice as long!
The proteins Dr. Hansen studies in these worms are similar to proteins in people. By studying C. elegans, researchers can potentially teach us more about how people age. Scientists and medical doctors might one day use this knowledge to help people stay healthier as they get older, and maybe even live longer. When you work in a research lab, you learn and explore little by little, day by day. “The implications are huge, but the steps we take toward them are usually small,” Dr. Hansen tells us. It is important to keep asking questions and sharing ideas. Dr. Hansen says, “Arguably, the most important trait for a scientist is curiosity.”
www.sanfordburnham.org | PORTAL
13
Nonprofit Organization U.S. Postage 10901 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037
PAID
Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute
PARTNERS IN SCIENCE
Art Brody, Dr. Chris Hassig & Dr. Michael Jackson San Diego businessman and philanthropist Art Brody pledged $1 million to help support Sanford-Burnham’s efforts to translate basic research discoveries into new medicines, creating the Arthur Brody Innovation Fund. Dr. Chris Hassig, Director, Drug Discovery and Dr. Michael Jackson, Vice President of Drug Discovery & Development, recently met with Mr. Brody in the Conrad Prebys Center for Chemical Genomics. This facility offers access to advanced drug discovery technologies. By testing hundreds of thousands of chemicals using the Center’s robots, researchers discover promising new medicines very quickly. Mr. Brody’s support will help leverage these early-stage discoveries to develop the next generation of innovative new medicines.