The NCL Foundation has opened the Rare-to-Common Neurodegeneration Impact Prize, a €200,000 research award supporting collaborative projects that connect CLN3 Batten disease research with more common neurodegenerative or age-related disorder

NCL Foundation launches €200,000 prize to connect rare and common neurodegeneration research

Photograph of neurons - CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 by Birth Into Being via Flickr.

The NCL Foundation has opened applications for the Rare-to-Common Neurodegeneration Impact Prize, a €200 000 award designed to support collaborative research projects at the interface between CLN3 Batten disease and more common neurodegenerative or age-related disorders.

Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) is a rare, inherited metabolic disease that remains largely under-researched. It is incurable, progresses relentlessly and leads to early death, typically beginning in childhood with loss of vision followed by cognitive and motor decline.

Bridging rare and common neurodegeneration

The prize aims to bring together research groups working on CLN3 — the most common form of NCL — with teams studying fields such as Alzheimer’s disease, retinal degeneration, cellular ageing or lysosomal dysfunction. Increasing evidence shows that these conditions share biological mechanisms, including lysosomal impairment and inflammatory pathways, offering opportunities for joint therapeutic advances.

Applications must be submitted by two collaborating research groups, one specialising in CLN3 and the other in a related field. The call is open internationally to teams affiliated with scientific institutions.

The application process follows two stages, beginning with a short project outline. The deadline for outline submission is 31 August 2026, with selected teams invited to submit full proposals by 31 October 2026.

Researchers seeking partners for their proposal can request matchmaking support from the Foundation, which also provides a global overview of NCL research groups to facilitate collaboration.

Further details and application information are available in the full call: Rare-to-Common Neurodegeneration Impact Prize.

News & Updates

You might also be interested in

June 12 - June 15
The conference will take place in Rotterdam on 12–15 June 2027 and is planned as a hybrid event by the European Society of Human Genetics.
At the European Human Genetics Conference 2026 in Gothenburg, ERDERA’s Diagnostic Research Workstream reviewed progress, highlighted early results and used a major European genetics meeting to examine how advances in data sharing and genomic analysis may strengthen rare disease diagnosis across countries.
Boston, 9–11 June 2026: ERDERA's Scientific Coordinator joined the World Orphan Drug Congress USA to set out how stronger clinical research networks can make rare disease trials more feasible across sites and borders.
On 3–4 June, EURORDIS–Rare Diseases Europe and Orphanet convened the rare disease community at ECRD 2026 in Prague around a shared call for coordinated European action, including the forthcoming European Blueprint for Rare Diseases.