Mission Statement
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The Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center (Gallo Center) is one of the world's preeminent academic centers for the study of biological basis of alcohol and substance abuse. Gallo center research has a remarkable track record of innovative and important discoveries of molecular, cellular and neuronal mechanisms that underlie alcoholism and substance abuse and their co-morbidities. Gallo Center discoveries of potential molecular targets for the development of therapeutic medications are extended through preclinical and proof-of-concept clinical studies. Gallo Center technologies are further developed through intellectual property licensing and joint development relationships with biotech and pharmaceutical companies.










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UCSF Researchers Make Headway with Potential Alcoholism Drug

In a groundbreaking drug study using mice and rats, two members of UCSF’s Neurology department have tapped into a potential new treatment for alcoholism in humans.

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New Drug Candidate to Treat Alcoholism Hits a Different Target in the Brain

Rats that drink like humans afflicted with alcoholism cut their drinking dramatically when treated with a new drug prototype — even after treatment ends.

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Many Recovering Alcoholics Depend on Coffee, Cigarettes

Selena Bartlett, the Sidney R. Baer Jr. Foundation Investigator at the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center of the University of California, San Francisco, thinks that the reliance on cigarettes by most recovering alcoholics has a biological basis and may actually increase the chances of relapse.

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Variability in reward learning performance often translates to life-long patterns of success or failure

Some individuals earn rewards more successfully than others, but it has been unclear what brain changes underlie these differences.  Tye et al. report that reward learning performance depends upon increased activity and synaptic strength in the amygdala, a brain area important for emotional learning.

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Excessive Drinking and Relapse Rapidly Cut in New Approach

Boosting the level of a specific brain protein quickly cut excessive drinking of alcohol in a new animal study, and also prevented relapse -- the common tendency found in sober alcoholics to easily return to heavy drinking after just one glass.

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