Michael J. Fox Foundation's $7.5M Leap: 21 Targets Unlocking Parkinson's Future

09/12/2025 3 min
Michael J. Fox Foundation's $7.5M Leap: 21 Targets Unlocking Parkinson's Future

Listen "Michael J. Fox Foundation's $7.5M Leap: 21 Targets Unlocking Parkinson's Future"

Episode Synopsis

Michael J. Fox BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.According to a December 8 press release from The Michael J. Fox Foundation, the most consequential development around me in the past few days is squarely scientific and historic: my foundation has initiated its first wave of target validation projects under the multi year Targets to Therapies initiative, a move framed as a major step toward new Parkinsons treatments and backed so far by 7.5 million dollars in early grants. The foundation describes this as one of its largest translational research investments to date, shifting from identifying more than 280 potential biological targets down to 21 priorities and now funding initial teams working on top candidates such as NOD2, OGA, and key endolysosomal mechanisms, with more teams to follow through 2026; in biographical terms this is the latest, and perhaps most mature, expression of the second act of my life as a patient turned research accelerator, and it is likely to loom large in any long view of my legacy. PR Newswire echoes the same announcement and language, underscoring how coordinated global data efforts like the ASAP and GP2 collaborations are converging under this umbrella, reinforcing my public identity less as retired actor and more as de facto statesman of Parkinsons research. On the cultural front, my 1985 calling card refuses to stay parked: the official Back to the Future site has been promoting a December 5 fortieth anniversary charity screening in Florence Alabama benefiting my foundation, tying fan nostalgia directly to fundraising and keeping my name visible on event calendars even when I am not physically on the red carpet. The Library of Congress blog is meanwhile touting an upcoming Back to the Future screening at its Packard Campus theater, a reminder that the film sits in the National Film Registry and that my younger self is still doing promotional work for my older causes every time the DeLorean lights up a marquee. More personality driven coverage this week recirculates earlier interviews and themes rather than breaking news: IMDb linked pieces highlight me talking about standing up to bullies in Back to the Future, about Eighties fame being tougher than todays social media celebrity, and about having outlived grim early prognoses after my Parkinsons diagnosis; these are lightly repackaged profiles, but they reinforce the public storyline of resilience and perspective that now defines how outlets write about me. A December item on Beliefnet leans into that same narrative, quoting me crediting my wife Tracy Pollan and our four children as my superpower in living with Parkinsons and revisiting family centered anecdotes previously aired in mainstream interviews. Speculation and gossip wise, there are no credible reports in the last few days of new health crises, film roles, or major personal upheavals; where online chatter stretches beyond these sourced items into rumors of surprise cameos or dramatic medical turns, none are confirmed by primary outlets or my own channels and should be treated as background noise rather than biography.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

More episodes of the podcast Michael J. Fox