FRF Appoints Chief Drug Development Officer, Dr. Gai Ayalon

We’re thrilled to announce the appointment of Dr. Gai Ayalon as the Chief Drug Development Officer of the FOXG1 Research Foundation (FRF).

Dr. Ayalon is a distinguished neuroscientist and drug developer, who over many years led teams and spearheaded drug development programs for neurological diseases including rare neurodevelopmental disorders, spanning the discovery, translation and clinical phases. He joins our foundation at a critical and pivotal juncture as we enter Phase Four on our Path to a Cure, taking programs through safety studies and clinical trials. 

 
 

We have successfully accomplished Phase One through Three on our Path to a Cure: building disease models, studying these models, and testing gene therapies, ASO's, CRISPRa and saRNA therapies on our models. These early experiments have shown that we can upregulate FOXG1 gene and protein levels, we can do so safely, and we can rescue key symptoms in animals such as motor function, cognition and corpus callosum degeneration. Dr. Ayalon will now lead this next phase by taking our therapeutic programs, one by one, to clinical trials. In order to do this we will be performing activities such as vector optimization, exploratory toxicology, GLP manufacturing and toxicology, and completing regulatory filings. 

Dr. Ayalon previously worked at Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, where he was the Project Team Leader of programs for pediatric neurodevelopmental disorders such as Angelman syndrome. Prior to Ultragenyx, Dr. Ayalon was a scientist at Genentech, in the neuroscience department. At Genentech he led drug discovery programs and teams focused on immunotherapeutic approaches to neurodegenerative diseases. 

Most recently, Dr. Ayalon was Vice President, Head of the Portfolio and Program Management group at Neumora Therapeutics, where he also led clinical stage programs for neuropsychiatric disorders. Dr. Ayalon received his Ph.D. from the Hebrew University Medical School in Jerusalem, Israel, and conducted his postdoctoral research at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at the Duke University Medical Center.  

In his new role as Chief Drug Development Officer, Dr. Ayalon will navigate the FOXG1 Research Foundation through clinical drug development, working closely with Dr. Soo-Kyung Lee’s lab at the University at Buffalo, as well as the FOXG1 Scientific Consortium of labs, and our global biopharma and clinical partners.  

We cannot be more optimistic about joining hands with Dr. Ayalon for this next chapter in our journey to greatly improve the lives of every patient and the families affected by FOXG1 syndrome.