Reflections Magazine Issue #86 - Summer 2017 | Page 14

Alumni Feature One on One With . . . Editor’s Note: This is an occasional Reflec- tions series, and this issue features Siena Heights chemistry graduate Dr. Amir Tamiz ’92, who heads the Division of Translational Research for the National Institute of Neurol- ogical Disorders and Strokes (NINDS) in Washington, D.C.. Could you describe your current role and some of the duties and responsibilities you have on a day-to-day basis? “I work at the National Institute of Neuro- logical Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), which is focused to seek fundamental knowledge about the brain and nervous system and to use that knowledge to reduce the burden of neurological disease. The NINDS is one of 27 institutes at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Within NINDS, I head the Division of Transla- tional Research, which is tasked with accelerat- ing the preclinical discovery and development of new therapeutic interventions for neurological disorders and stroke. We provide funding and resources (approximately $100 million annually) through grants, cooperative agreements and contracts to academic and industry researchers to advance basic research technologies, devices and therapeutic programs to first in human clini- cal trials and commercialization, with the hope to get therapies for patients who need them. DTR helps academic and industry researchers create a bridge through which discoveries made in the lab lead to new and improved medical treatments and options for patient care. We offer a variety of programs that support the design, implementation, and management of research activities critical to translational chal- lenges in the treatment of neurological disease and stroke. My day-to-day responsibilities vary—on some days I’m participating in conferences about advances in neuroscience or taking part in a committee to identify the most promising grant applications for funding. On other days, I’m working with the team at NINDS to develop training programs to help researchers learn about translational research.” How did you get this position, and how long have you been the program director? “I’ve always thought that medicine was an important calling, and even considered going 14 | Reflections Summer ’17 Above: Pictured with Dr. Amir Tamiz is his wife, Tammy Deuster, and their daughters, Layla and Darya. to medical school after graduating from Siena Heights and ended up studying chemistry more deeply. I thought that I might also be able to help people by developing the medicines instead of a doctor who prescribes the medicine. After I finished grad school and my post-doc, I joined biotech and spent the next many years working with other scientists to progress potential thera- peutics to clinical trials. Through my tenure in biotech, I worked on some very exciting therapy development projects such as cancer, diabetes and celiac disease. I joined the NIH in 2012—little over 20 years after I graduated from Siena Heights— and I was able to bring my experience in drug development to help with their initiative to sup- port more translational research that would help to ‘translate’ progress in basic research toward treatments that can help patients. A few examples of projects that we currently fund are discovery and development of treatment for stroke, Epilepsy, traumatic brain injury and Muscular Dystrophy, to name a few. I was promoted to Director of the Division of Transla- tional research in 2016.” What attracted you to the area of neurology? “The brain is a fascinating topic. I started working on the brain in graduate school—my dissertation was focused on thinking about how to deliver therapeutics to the brain and how to develop treatments to help patients with Parkin- son’s disease. The body does its best to protect the brain from toxins by keeping the blood sepa- rated from brain fluid by a membrane we call the blood brain barrier. This barrier also makes it more difficult to deliver medicines to the brain. I tried to optimize the design of a molecule to more efficiently traverse that barrier. And, thus, my fascination with the brain deepened.” How much of your current position is that of a scientist, and how much is being an administrator? “My current job is administrative—although I leverage my first-hand experience of work- ing in t