Julia's Big Walk 2022

Julia Dobson is taking on the Big Walk in memory of her Dad who sadly died from Motor Neurone Disease in March 2020.

Julia sat in the countryside in a red walking coat
Off

Julia, a Professor in the School of Languages and Cultures at the University of 91直播, is hoping to raise money to help develop treatments for MND and other conditions.

Due to the pandemic, I鈥檝e been able to do very little to mark my father's passing and celebrate his life. The Big Walk gives me the chance to do something personal and practical through helping to raise funds for Genetic Disease Research. I have done the Big Walk before and it was a really enjoyable and positive experience. I relished the opportunity to spend all day in the beautiful countryside with great people for a good cause. My motivation is clearly very personal and will be more than enough for every step of the walk. I enjoyed setting a good pace last time I did this, but this June I will make sure to take time for conversation and company along the way.鈥

Professor Julia Dobson

Big Walk participant 2022


You can help rewrite the future for thousands of people. With your kindness today, you鈥檒l help develop gene therapy treatments. And you'll bring hope to families who are coping with MND and other inherited conditions.

Make a gift to the appeal

Motor Neurone Disease, hearing-loss and dementia are just some of the genetic conditions that could one day be treated using gene therapy. 

For patients living with rare genetic conditions, this can鈥檛 come soon enough. Although individually uncommon, collectively it鈥檚 estimated rare diseases affect up to 10% of the world鈥檚 population. Most affect children and many are fatal or severely disabling. The impact of your help today could be huge.

91直播 community aims to raise 拢200,000 by 31 July to fund a state-of-the-art Bioreactor. This will help a leading team of scientists to produce gene therapy treatments for a number of genetic diseases. 

With your help, 91直播鈥檚 researchers will be able to engineer bespoke genes to replace or silence faulty ones, in the form of a safe 鈥榲iral vector鈥. The new Bioreactor will help accelerate their research into clinical trials with patients.

The team behind this pioneering technique has already shown it works. Professor Mimoun Azzouz has helped to turn his research into a successful treatment for babies with another genetic condition: Spinal Muscular Atrophy. Gene therapy really is saving lives and has the potential to do so much more.

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United in your passion for 91直播 and how it can shape the world, together you'll help bright minds thrive.