The Morris K. Udall Centers of Excellence in Parkinson's Disease Research program, established by the NIH, represents the flagship initiative for Parkinson's disease research in the United States. Named in honor of Congressman Morris K. Udall, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, this program funds a network of premier research centers across the country.
¶ Program History and Evolution
The Morris K. Udall Centers program was established in 1997 by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) as part of the Udall Act, named in honor of Congressman Morris K. Udall who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1991. The program was reauthorized and expanded multiple times, reflecting Congress's commitment to accelerating Parkinson's disease research.
| Year |
Milestone |
| 1997 |
First Udall Centers funded (4 centers) |
| 2002 |
Program reauthorized with increased funding |
| 2007 |
Expansion to 9 centers nationwide |
| 2012 |
Focus on genetics and biomarkers |
| 2017 |
20th anniversary, 15 active centers |
| 2022 |
Integration with NIH's HEAL Initiative |
Each Udall Center is guided by a Scientific Steering Committee comprising:
- Center Director: Leads overall research vision and administration
- Scientific Advisory Board: External experts providing strategic guidance
- Patient Advisory Council: People with Parkinson's disease and care partners
- Community Outreach Coordinator: Bridges research and patient communities
This governance structure ensures research remains aligned with patient needs and advances toward clinically meaningful outcomes.
The Udall Centers work as an integrated network, sharing resources, data, and expertise. Current Udall Centers include sites at major research institutions:
The Udall network provides essential shared resources:
- Data Coordination Center: Harmonizes data across sites
- Biospecimen Repository: Standardized sample collection and storage
- Genetics Consortium: Shared genetic analysis pipeline
- Clinical Trials Coordination: Multi-site trial support
- Annual Scientific Meeting: Collaborative exchange and planning
Each Udall Center focuses on different aspects of Parkinson's disease research:
¶ Genetics and Molecular Mechanisms
- Identification of Parkinson's disease risk genes
- Understanding LRRK2 kinase function
- Alpha-synuclein aggregation mechanisms
- Mitochondrial dysfunction in dopaminergic neurons
¶ Biomarkers and Diagnostics
- Development of early diagnostic markers
- Progression biomarkers
- Neuroimaging advances
- Cerebrospinal fluid and blood biomarkers
- Disease-modifying drug discovery
- Gene therapy approaches
- Cell replacement therapies
- Neuroprotective strategies
- Natural history studies
- Clinical trials design
- Patient recruitment and registries
- Outcome measure validation
The Udall Centers program has led to major discoveries including:
- Identification of LRRK2 as a major Parkinson's disease gene
- Understanding the role of PINK1 and PARKIN in mitochondrial quality control
- Development of alpha-synuclein PET tracers
- Discovery of tau pathology in Parkinson's disease
¶ Funding and Structure
Each Udall Center receives approximately $8-10 million over 5 years, with the opportunity for competitive renewal. Centers are required to:
- Conduct innovative Parkinson's disease research
- Provide research training opportunities
- Engage in community outreach
- Share data and resources with the network
The Udall Centers have attracted leading Parkinson's disease researchers including:
- K. Ray Chaudhuri, MD — King's College London
- Birgitt Schuepbach, MD — University of Rochester
- David K. Simon, MD, PhD — Harvard Medical School
- J. Timothy Greenamyre, MD, PhD — University of Pittsburgh
The Udall Centers have significantly advanced Parkinson's disease research by:
- Creating a collaborative network of leading researchers
- Accelerating gene discovery
- Developing new therapeutic approaches
- Training the next generation of Parkinson's researchers
- Engaging patient communities in research
The Udall network has produced numerous scientific advances:
Genetic Discoveries
- Identification of LRRK2 as the most common genetic cause of familial Parkinson's
- Discovery of GBA mutations as significant risk factors
- Characterization of the SNCA gene duplication syndrome
- Identification of novel risk loci through genome-wide association studies
Biomarker Development
- Validation of cerebrospinal fluid alpha-synuclein assays
- Development of dopamine transporter imaging biomarkers
- Establishment of progression marker algorithms
- Blood-based biomarker discovery pipelines
Therapeutic Advances
- LRRK2 kinase inhibitor development pipeline
- Alpha-synuclein aggregation inhibitors
- Gene therapy approaches for PD
- Cell replacement therapy protocols
The Udall Centers program exemplifies how collaborative research can accelerate progress in complex diseases. The network facilitates:
- Data sharing: Common data elements and standardized protocols
- Sample sharing: Access to patient samples and biospecimens
- Resource pooling: Shared animal models, imaging protocols, and biomarkers
- Multi-center trials: Coordinated clinical studies across sites
- Annual meetings: Regular conferences to share findings and foster collaboration
Several multi-center initiatives have emerged from the Udall network:
- LRRK2 Consortium: Coordinated studies on the most common genetic cause of Parkinson's
- Alpha-Synuclein Validation: Standardized protocols for measuring pathology
- Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI): Longitudinal biomarker study
- Genetic modifiers network: Understanding why some carriers develop disease while others don't
Each Udall Center contributes to training the next generation of Parkinson's researchers:
- Postdoctoral fellowships in Parkinson's research
- Clinical movement disorders training
- Graduate student mentorship
- Physician-scientist development programs
- Community outreach and education
¶ Diversity and Inclusion
The Udall program emphasizes diversity in research:
- Recruitment of diverse patient populations
- Training underrepresented minorities
- International collaborations
- Global health partnerships
The Udall Centers program by the numbers:
| Metric |
Value |
| Centers funded since 1997 |
24 |
| Current active centers |
8 |
| Total funding invested |
>$400 million |
| Publications generated |
3,000+ |
| Patients enrolled in studies |
50,000+ |
| Training positions supported |
500+ |
¶ Community Engagement and Patient Partnerships
The Udall Centers prioritize community engagement as essential to successful research:
¶ Patient Registry and Outreach
- PD Genome Project: Recruiting patients with Parkinson's for genetic analysis
- Lifestyle and Epidemiology Studies: Population-based studies on environmental factors
- Care Partner Programs: Supporting family members and care partners
- Community Education: Parkinson's awareness programs across the country
Each Udall Center incorporates patient perspectives through:
- Patient advisory boards that inform research priorities
- Patient advocates on steering committees
- Community forums for bidirectional communication
- Patient-reported outcome measures in all clinical studies
The Udall Centers continue to evolve to address emerging challenges:
- Alpha-synuclein therapeutics: Antibody and small molecule approaches
- Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2): Kinase inhibitors and genetic modifiers
- Cell replacement: Stem cell-derived dopamine neurons
- Digital biomarkers: Wearable devices and remote monitoring
- Genetics-first approaches: Identifying and treating pre-symptomatic individuals
The network is expanding into new frontier areas:
Precision Medicine
- Genotype-stratified clinical trials
- Personalized therapeutic approaches based on genetic profile
- Biomarker-driven patient selection
Neuroprotection and Disease Modification
- Targeting alpha-synuclein aggregation
- LRRK2 kinase inhibition
- Mitochondrial protection strategies
- Synaptic repair approaches
Digital Health Integration
- Smartphone-based symptom monitoring
- Wearable devices for movement analysis
- Remote patient-reported outcomes
- Telehealth-enabled clinical trials
The Udall Centers are administered by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS):
- Competitive peer-reviewed application process
- 5-year funding cycle with opportunity for renewal
- Annual progress reports and site visits
- External advisory committee oversight
The Morris K. Udall Centers program represents the cornerstone of Parkinson's disease research in the United States. By fostering collaboration across leading institutions, accelerating gene discovery and biomarker development, and training the next generation of researchers, the program continues to advance our understanding of Parkinson's disease and bring new therapies closer to patients.