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Regenerative Medicine Center led by School of Dentistry receives $31.4 million grant from NIDCR

May 19, 2020

Ann Arbor, Mich. - A $31.4 million grant from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research will allow a regenerative medicine resource center led by the School of Dentistry to continue its important research into the restoration of dental, oral and craniofacial tissues lost to disease, injury or congenital disorders.

The five-year grant is the largest research award ever received by the school. It extends funding for the Michigan-Pittsburgh-Wyss Regenerative Medicine Resource Center, which was established in 2017 with an $11.7 million start-up grant, also from NIDCR. The resource center’s leadership team includes researchers from the University of Michigan, University of Pittsburgh and the Wyss Institute at Harvard University.

In its first three years, the center has brought together a multi-disciplinary team of scientists, engineers, clinicians, and regulatory and technology commercialization experts who evaluate regenerative medicine projects submitted by academic, for-profit and non-profit researchers. Regenerative medicine investigates how to regenerate damaged cells, tissues or organs to their full function, such as finding ways for the body to heal wounds faster or to repair bone that has been damaged. Research strategies often integrate engineering and biology, and can incorporate biomaterials, biologics and drug delivery, cellular therapies, medical devices or combinations of those.

The Resource Center currently funds 13 Interdisciplinary Translational Projects, or ITPs. The center contributes scientific expertise and also helps guide the researchers and their new technologies through steps such as Food and Drug Administration requirements, pre-clinical studies, market analyses and commercialization strategies. The new grant will help advance the projects to the point where investigators receive FDA approval to begin clinical trials in patients for their new products and-or procedures, with the ultimate goal being their widespread use in the treatment of patients.

David Kohn, a professor at the dental school and lead Principal Investigator for the Resource Center, said the new grant allows the center to expand on its early successes involving a wide variety of research projects. “We are excited to advance to the next stage of this unique program and pleased that the NIDCR has the confidence in us to invest further in this initiative,” said Kohn, who is a professor in the dental school’s Department of Biologic and Materials Sciences and a professor of biomedical engineering in the U-M College of Engineering. “It allows us to use the structure and processes we have developed so far to guide the projects to successful translation for patients and-or commercialization. We have nurtured projects related to many areas of critical need in the dental, oral and craniofacial space, and have helped many projects advance along the translational pipeline, which is complex, time-consuming and costly.”

Dean Laurie McCauley said the new grant from the NIDCR, part of the National Institutes of Health, is a significant milestone in the School of Dentistry’s longstanding commitment to scientific research. She noted that the school has been a national and world leader in dental and craniofacial research, dating to its early days after being founded in 1875. “We are pleased to partner with the NIDCR and the other universities in this robust and ground-breaking project,” McCauley said. “To be leading this multidisciplinary group engaged in the latest regenerative medicine research is a testament to the quality of our faculty and researchers. It illustrates our commitment to advance and lead transformative science.”

Kohn said 90 percent of projects in research center’s portfolio have been issued a patent or have a pending patent application; 80 percent have had submissions to the FDA in efforts toward clinical clearance or approval; and 100 percent have corporate engagement. Several new companies have been formed, others have received equity financing, some have advanced to clinical trials on sister technologies, and yet others have received add-on funding. “The impact of these efforts will be a catalysis of translation never previously achieved in an NIH extramural program, resulting in the transformation of dental, oral and craniofacial medicine,” Kohn said.

The projects funded so far by the Research Center include many types of oral and craniofacial research. One is centered on a patented bone adhesive designed to aid in the treatment of fractured bone and to more efficiently stabilize dental implants. Another is pursuing gene therapy to provide relief from dry mouth in patients whose salivary function has been damaged by radiotherapy for head and neck cancers.

William Giannobile, Co-Principal Investigator, the William K. and Mary Anne Najjar Professor of Dentistry and Chair of the Department of Periodontics and Oral Medicine, and a professor of biomedical engineering in the U-M College of Engineering, said that this initiative supported by the NIDCR is the first of its kind to aim to truly transform dental regenerative medicine to advance patient care. “There have been many unsuccessful attempts of industry bringing regenerative technologies to advance clinical care,” Giannobile said, “but this partnership offers a novel structure to leverage synergies between industry and academic scientists to realize clinical adoption.”

The mix of projects in the Michigan-Pittsburgh-Wyss center and DOCTRC program will change as some exit the initiative because they have received FDA approval, follow-on funding, licensing of technology or the formation of a new company. The program will then be opened to new projects with established proof-of-concept and substantial translational research already in progress.

David Kohn

David Kohn

william giannobile

William Giannobile

Other principal investigators with Kohn and Giannobile are Charles Sfeir, Associate Dean for Research and the Director of the Center for Craniofacial Regeneration at the University of Pittsburgh; William Wagner, Director of the McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine and a Professor of Surgery, Bioengineering and Chemical Engineering at the University of Pittsburgh; and David Mooney, a professor of Bioengineering at Harvard University and Core Faculty Member at the Wyss Institute. (Giannobile will become dean of the Harvard School of Dental Medicine in September and will remain as a principal investigator with the Resource Center).

The Resource Center includes U-M collaborators from the Medical School, School of Public Health, College of Pharmacy, College of Engineering, the Office of Technology Transfer and the Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research, as well as contributors from private companies across the country. Mutsumi Yoshida, managing director of the center’s U-M site at the dental school, manages the ITP program, which is the center’s funding mechanism. She coordinates program needs with Patrick Cantini, a program administrator at the University of Pittsburgh’s McGowan Institute.

The Michigan-Pittsburgh-Wyss Regenerative Medicine Resource Center is one of the two national Resource Centers established by the NIDCR in 2017 through its Dental Oral and Craniofacial Tissue Regeneration Consortium (DOCTRC) initiative. The other is the Center for Dental, Oral and Craniofacial Tissue and Organ Regeneration, or C-DOCTOR, a collaboration among several universities in California.

The Michigan-Pittsburgh-Wyss center website

NIDCR’s DOCTRC initiative