Ice Bucket Challenge leads to discovery of new ALS breakthrough

This 2014 file photo shows two women getting doused during the Ice Bucket Challenge to raise funds and awareness for ALS. The Ice Bucket Challenge was a viral hit in 2014 that raised $115 million for ALS research. This week, the University of... (Copyright by WSLS - All rights reserved)

Raven Brown, News 8 Social Media Specialist – (WTNH)– In 2014, social media exploded with the "Ice Bucket Challenge," a viral awareness and fundraising campaign used to help fight against ALS. Now, two years later, scientists discover a new gene linked to ALS.

New York Daily News reports The University of Massachusetts Medical School's Project MinE discovered the gene that's responsible for ALS.

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The gene is NEK1, a gene that could help find ways to understand and treat ALS.

The campaign encouraged people from all around the world to participate and dump ice-water over their heads to raise money.

A total of $115 million dollars was raised that was donated to the the ALS association to advance research for treatments and cures, CNN reports.

"The sophisticated gene analysis that led to this finding was only possible because of the large number of ALS samples available," said Dr. Lucie Bruijin, Chief Scientist at the ALS Association told CNN. "The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge enabled The ALS Association to invest in Project MinE's work to create large biorepositories of ALS biosamples that are designed to allow exactly this kind of research and to produce exactly this kind of result."

Last year, another breakthrough was made. Researchers at John Hopkins University discovered how a brain protein linked to ALS worked.


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