How a parent of a child with a rare disease built a team to find answers
Collaboration between interdisciplinary researchers could serve as a model for the rare disease community.
Collaboration between interdisciplinary researchers could serve as a model for the rare disease community.
The Polyamigos is an unusual club: a collection of scientists who seem, at first glance, to have little in common. Some study human genetics. Others are experts in lab animals, such as flies or mice, or the biochemistry of molecules.
Michael Raymond, a father with no background in science, has united these researchers for a common cause. They are investigating, from multiple angles, one of the rarest diseases on the planet — a disease that threatened Michael’s son’s life. Known as Snyder-Robinson Syndrome, this condition is characterized by intellectual disability, muscle and bone abnormalities, developmental delays and other medical problems. It is thought to affect only males (although emerging evidence could challenge that view).
In the illustrated story below, follow the journey of this father and learn how he helped to change the course of science.
To learn more about ongoing research into this disease and find resources for families whose children are affected, visit the Snyder-Robinson Foundation. CZI supports the Snyder-Robinson Foundation as part of the Rare As One project and our work in patient-driven research.
Read another illustrative science story: How an urgent call from a family in Italy changed this scientist’s career
To understand where we are today with medical imaging and where we’re going, it helps to look back on the progress humanity has made already.
Watch to learn how Gokul Upadhyayula builds revolutionary imaging technologies that push the boundaries of what scientists can see and measure.
When researchers looked for inherited genes linked with survival among breast cancer patients, they turned up a variant responsible for an entirely different...
Stay up-to-date on the latest news, publications, competitions, and stories from CZ Biohub.
Cookies and JavaScript are required to access this form.