Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Released: 28-Jun-2023 3:05 PM EDT
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Researchers Awarded $15.1 Million Grant to Explore Immune Rejection of Transplanted Organs
Mount Sinai Health System

Striving to improve organ transplant survival rates, internationally renowned researchers in immunology and bioengineering at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have received $15.1 million from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) to lead a novel, five-year multi-center research program that will explore trained immunity—the innate immune system’s ability to remember infections and other insults—as a target for preventing organ transplant rejection.

Released: 28-Jun-2023 3:05 PM EDT
For Type 2 Diabetics Who Exercise, Some Approaches Are Better Than Others
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

An analysis on the positive effects of exercise on blood sugar levels in people with Type 2 diabetes shows that while all exercise helps, certain activities – and their timing – are extremely good for people’s health. The study, published in The American Journal of Medicine, provides a comprehensive but straightforward summary of the benefits of exercise on controlling blood glucose levels in people with Type 2 diabetes.

Newswise: Highlighting Women Scientists: Rutgers Cancer Institute Researcher Awarded V Foundation for Cancer Research Grant
Released: 28-Jun-2023 3:05 PM EDT
Highlighting Women Scientists: Rutgers Cancer Institute Researcher Awarded V Foundation for Cancer Research Grant
Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Christina Glytsou, PhD, member of the Cancer Metabolism and Immunology Cancer Pharmacology Program at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, has received an award from The V Foundation for Cancer Research, a premier cancer research charity, to support her research on mitochondrial dynamics adaptations in drug-resistant acute myeloid leukemia.

Newswise: ChatGPT Tricks Teachers
Released: 28-Jun-2023 2:05 PM EDT
ChatGPT Tricks Teachers
University of California San Diego

Can you tell if what you’re reading right now was written by a human or generated by artificial intelligence? Do you care? Those are essentially the questions that University of California San Diego researchers asked in an experiment with ChatGPT at a regional high school.

Newswise: Scientists Design a Nanoparticle That May Improve mRNA Cancer Vaccines
Released: 28-Jun-2023 9:30 AM EDT
Scientists Design a Nanoparticle That May Improve mRNA Cancer Vaccines
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have developed a nanoparticle — an extremely tiny biodegradable container — that has the potential to improve the delivery of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)-based vaccines for infectious diseases such as COVID-19, and vaccines for treating non-infectious diseases including cancer.

Newswise: University Hospitals in Cleveland receives $10 Million from The Veale Foundation to address health care’s largest issues with technology and innovation
Released: 28-Jun-2023 9:30 AM EDT
University Hospitals in Cleveland receives $10 Million from The Veale Foundation to address health care’s largest issues with technology and innovation
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

A visionary $10 million gift from The Veale Foundation to University Hospitals will establish the Veale Initiative for Health Care Innovation at UH. Dr. Peter Pronovost will lead the initiative. He is a world-renowned patient safety champion, physician executive, critical care physician, prolific researcher with more than 1000 peer-reviewed publications, an innovator who has founded several technology companies and a thought leader informing U.S. and global health policy. He is UH Chief Quality and Clinical Transformation Officer, and Veale Distinguished Chair in Leadership and Clinical Transformation. Dr. Pronovost said, “…we will develop a novel approach to define, clarify and prioritize health care’s biggest problems and then find and test solutions to those problems.” The Veale Initiative will pilot groundbreaking innovations and technology with the ultimate goal to transform the entire sector.

Released: 28-Jun-2023 9:30 AM EDT
University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve University Research Teams Receive Collaborative Science Pilot Awards
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

Three University Hospitals and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine research teams recently received Collaborative Science Pilot Awards. The teams each received $50,000, funded by both institutions. If substantial progress is accomplished and milestones are achieved, an additional year of funding will be considered.

Released: 28-Jun-2023 9:15 AM EDT
Susan G. Komen® Announces 2023 Grants to Accelerate Research Discoveries and Improve Outcomes for Breast Cancer Patients
Susan G. Komen

Susan G. Komen®, the world’s leading breast cancer organization, today announced the awarding of 49 new grants to researchers at 28 leading institutions in the U.S. The $19.3 million in new grants support Komen’s mission to end breast cancer through funding two focus areas: advancing precision medicine and eliminating disparities in breast cancer outcomes, while continuing Komen’s commitment to supporting the next generation of diverse leaders in breast cancer research.

Newswise: KU Cancer Center receives historic $100 million gift from Sunderland Foundation to support new cancer research and care facility
Released: 27-Jun-2023 9:05 PM EDT
KU Cancer Center receives historic $100 million gift from Sunderland Foundation to support new cancer research and care facility
University of Kansas Cancer Center

The University of Kansas Cancer Center has received a $100 million lead gift to build a new, state-of-the-art destination cancer center. This gift is both the largest gift ever given by the Sunderland Foundation and the largest ever received by the University of Kansas and The University of Kansas Health System.

Newswise: NAU researchers awarded DoD grant to investigate invasive species impacting threatened, endangered plants  
Released: 27-Jun-2023 8:25 PM EDT
NAU researchers awarded DoD grant to investigate invasive species impacting threatened, endangered plants  
Northern Arizona University

The Department of Defense Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP) has awarded Northern Arizona University a grant upwards of $1 million to support a five-year research project aimed at understanding the impact of invasive species on threatened and endangered (T&E) plants.

Newswise: Deaf Mice Have Nearly Normal Inner Ear Function Until Ear Canal Opens
26-Jun-2023 12:05 PM EDT
Deaf Mice Have Nearly Normal Inner Ear Function Until Ear Canal Opens
Johns Hopkins Medicine

For the first two weeks of life, mice with a hereditary form of deafness have nearly normal neural activity in the auditory system, according to a new study by Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists. Their previous studies indicate that this early auditory activity — before the onset of hearing — provides a kind of training to prepare the brain to process sound when hearing begins.

Newswise: Public-private consortium will fund three gene therapy clinical trials at UT Southwestern and Children’s Health
Released: 27-Jun-2023 11:45 AM EDT
Public-private consortium will fund three gene therapy clinical trials at UT Southwestern and Children’s Health
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A consortium of government, industry, and nonprofit partners will fund gene therapy clinical trials for three different rare diseases at UT Southwestern Medical Center and Children’s Health, where scientists are working on gene therapies to treat neurodevelopmental disorders in children.

Released: 27-Jun-2023 11:20 AM EDT
Virginia Tech leads multi-institution research on polymeric solid fuel combustion
Virginia Tech

Fascination surrounding spaceflight and rockets is at an all-time high. Sites near launchpads draw crowds of spectators, eager to witness the flash of fire and feel the vibrations as the rumble of the motor becomes a roar. People, squinting and craning their necks to watch the rocket hurtle out of sight, aren’t likely thinking about the science behind the propulsion that makes it all possible.

26-Jun-2023 4:05 PM EDT
Poverty negatively impacts structural wiring in children’s brains, study indicates
Washington University in St. Louis

A study by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis reveals that household and community poverty may influence brain health in children. Childhood obesity and lower cognitive function may explain, at least partially, poverty’s influence on the brain.

   
Newswise: Rogel Cancer Center awarded $37M from NCI
Released: 27-Jun-2023 10:50 AM EDT
Rogel Cancer Center awarded $37M from NCI
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The National Cancer Institute has awarded the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center a grant worth $37 million over five years. At the same time, the center’s designation as a “comprehensive cancer center” was renewed.

Newswise: UAlbany Professor Receives Funding to Advance ALS Research
Released: 27-Jun-2023 10:50 AM EDT
UAlbany Professor Receives Funding to Advance ALS Research
University at Albany, State University of New York

University at Albany’s Professor Li Niu has received new funding to support his research investigating new treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The proposed work will build on his lab’s existing research in this area, with a focus on testing RNA aptamers designed to block excessive activity of glutamate receptors, which causes cell death in the spinal cord and brain. The team hopes that their findings will help inform a new and an effective approach to ALS treatment.

Released: 27-Jun-2023 9:00 AM EDT
Mount Sinai Institute for Exposomics Research Awarded $8.45 Million Grant to Study Environmental Health
Mount Sinai Health System

New five-year award will focus on the effects of environmental exposures on health across the lifespan

   
Newswise: Addressing Health in Areas Characterized by Persistent Poverty
Released: 26-Jun-2023 5:05 PM EDT
Addressing Health in Areas Characterized by Persistent Poverty
University of Utah Health

Center for HOPE and Montana State University's Center for American Indian and Rural Heath Equity collaborate on cancer research in areas with persistent poverty, funded by the National Cancer Institute.

Newswise: A new ‘war of the roses’: Researchers integrate sensors, drones and machine learning to target thorny pest
Released: 26-Jun-2023 11:05 AM EDT
A new ‘war of the roses’: Researchers integrate sensors, drones and machine learning to target thorny pest
West Virginia University

Multiflora rose may sound like a bountiful variant of the classic flowering bush, but its unexpected white blooms and red berries conceal one of Mother Nature’s sinister surprises: The invasive shrub is a thorny foe that threatens native plants in more than 40 states, including West Virginia and neighboring Pennsylvania.

Newswise: RIPE researchers determine chloroplast size unlikely option for improving photosynthetic efficiency
Released: 26-Jun-2023 9:55 AM EDT
RIPE researchers determine chloroplast size unlikely option for improving photosynthetic efficiency
Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE) Project

A group of RIPE researchers have found, for the first time, that chloroplast size manipulations are unlikely to be an option for increasing crop photosynthetic efficiency. Their work was recently published in New Phytologist.

Newswise: Large and In Charge
Released: 23-Jun-2023 2:05 PM EDT
Large and In Charge
Baylor University

In 2018 and 2019, Sarah Kienle, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology at Baylor University, and her colleagues collected movement and dive behavior data and samples from leopard seals off the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Their goal was to compile crucial baseline data on the ecology and physiology of this enigmatic species.

Newswise: ESF Researchers Receive NSF Funding for Eco-manufacturing of Renewable Lignin-derived Products using Sustainable Energy
Released: 23-Jun-2023 11:25 AM EDT
ESF Researchers Receive NSF Funding for Eco-manufacturing of Renewable Lignin-derived Products using Sustainable Energy
SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry

Researchers at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) received a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to further its research on carbon-neutral alternative sources for value-added chemicals currently sourced from petroleum and other fossil fuels.

Newswise: Combination therapy effective against canine melanoma
Released: 22-Jun-2023 9:20 PM EDT
Combination therapy effective against canine melanoma
Hokkaido University

A combination of radiotherapy followed by immunotherapy is a promising strategy for the treatment of oral malignant melanomas in dogs.

Newswise: Study Sets New Standard for Graft-Versus-Host Disease Prevention After Stem Cell Transplant
Released: 22-Jun-2023 1:15 PM EDT
Study Sets New Standard for Graft-Versus-Host Disease Prevention After Stem Cell Transplant
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Clinicians have a new standard for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prevention after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, according to results from a phase III study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The new standard is more effective at preventing GVHD and came with less side effects, compared with the current gold standard.

Newswise: SMU creating human trafficking data 'warehouse'
Released: 21-Jun-2023 9:20 AM EDT
SMU creating human trafficking data 'warehouse'
Southern Methodist University

SMU (Southern Methodist University) is creating a federally-funded data warehouse to centralize data collection and support research into human trafficking in the United States.

   
Released: 20-Jun-2023 5:20 PM EDT
Rensselaer Researcher To Investigate the Mechanics of Mitosis To Combat Cancer
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI)

It is a scary fact that one in two women and one in three men in the United States will develop some form of cancer in their lifetime. One of the hallmarks of many cancers is the occurrence of errors during the cell division process called mitosis. Therefore, critical to enhancing treatments or perhaps even finding a cure for cancer and other diseases, is developing a better understanding of how mitosis works in both healthy and diseased cells.

Released: 20-Jun-2023 2:30 PM EDT
Husker engineers earn grant to protect military bases against EV-based attacks
University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Most are watching the gradual shift from gas-powered to electric vehicles through the mirrors of the environment, climate or automotive industry.

Newswise: Less-invasive Cardiac MRI Is a Valuable Diagnostic Tool in the Early Evaluation of Patients with Acute Chest Pain
20-Jun-2023 11:05 AM EDT
Less-invasive Cardiac MRI Is a Valuable Diagnostic Tool in the Early Evaluation of Patients with Acute Chest Pain
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

An estimated 3 million patients visit emergency departments each year with acute chest pain and mildly elevated troponin levels. A new study from researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine reveals that cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), is a safe and valuable tool to help evaluate these complex patients.

20-Jun-2023 8:00 AM EDT
Walkable Neighborhoods Help Adults Socialize, Increase Community
University of California San Diego

Adults who live in walkable neighborhoods are more likely to socialize and have a stronger sense of community, report researchers at the UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science.

   
16-Jun-2023 12:45 PM EDT
Assessment of How Climate Scientists Communicate Risk Shows Imperfections, Improvements
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Scientists have long struggled to find the best way to present crucial facts about future sea level rise, but are getting better at communicating more clearly, according to an international group of climate scientists, including a leading Rutgers expert.

Newswise: $11.7M from Department of Defense to fund research on common complication to traumatic brain injury
Released: 15-Jun-2023 4:45 PM EDT
$11.7M from Department of Defense to fund research on common complication to traumatic brain injury
Indiana University

Researchers at the School of Science at IUPUI will lead grants to fund research toward an effective drug treatment for hydrocephalus, a condition commonly associated with complications from traumatic brain injury.

Released: 15-Jun-2023 4:35 PM EDT
UC Irvine to lead multi-institutional study of single-cell vulnerabilities to Alzheimer’s disease
University of California, Irvine

The University of California, Irvine has received a five-year, $10 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to lead a multi-institutional study of specific brain cell vulnerabilities to abnormal tau protein deposits in regions affected in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.

14-Jun-2023 3:40 PM EDT
Diagnosis of rare, genetic muscle disease improved by new approach
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have developed an approach that could help doctors distinguish between the many subtypes of limb girdle muscular dystrophy, a rare, genetic muscle disease. With new therapies poised to enter the clinic, identifying the precise subtype is necessary to ensure that people get access to the treatment most likely to benefit them.

Newswise: Study Reveals a Trio of Immune Cells Vital in Response to Liver Cancer Immunotherapy
13-Jun-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Study Reveals a Trio of Immune Cells Vital in Response to Liver Cancer Immunotherapy
Mount Sinai Health System

Researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai have uncovered a trio of immune cells within tumor niches that are associated with immunotherapy response in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). HCC is the primary type of liver cancer and one of the most deadly cancers worldwide.

Released: 15-Jun-2023 10:25 AM EDT
Hackensack Meridian Neuroscience Institute at JFK University Medical Center Awarded Research Grant to Study Novel Approach to Repair Central Nervous System Damage from Chronic Alcohol Abuse
Hackensack Meridian Health

Two-year grant will fund preclinical studies to explore new approach to address brain-cell degeneration and deficits in sensory-motor, psychological and cognitive functions caused by alcohol use disorder

12-Jun-2023 6:35 PM EDT
Altered gut bacteria may be early sign of Alzheimer’s disease
Washington University in St. Louis

Alzheimer’s disease causes changes to the brain that begin two decades or more before symptoms appear. A study by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis reveals that the bacteria that live in the gut also change before Alzheimer’s symptoms arise, a discovery that could lead to diagnostics or treatments for Alzheimer’s disease that target the gut microbiome.

Released: 14-Jun-2023 1:30 PM EDT
UC Irvine receives grant to study lead exposure effects on children’s learning, behavior
University of California, Irvine

The Program in Public Health at the University of California, Irvine has received a five-year, $2.7 million grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences to research the connection between low-level lead exposure during pregnancy and early childhood and children’s school performance and behavior in Santa Ana, California.

Released: 14-Jun-2023 1:05 PM EDT
IU researcher receives NSF award to study carbon-trapping mineral systems
Indiana University

Chen Zhu, a globally recognized geologist and professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences within the College of Arts and Sciences at Indiana University Bloomington, has been awarded $736,000 from the National Science Foundation to solve long-standing gaps in scientists’ understanding of CO2-water-rock interactions that naturally remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Released: 14-Jun-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Multi-city trial will use community centers to bring treatment to Black opioid users 
University of Illinois Chicago

A new clinical trial run by Howard University, the University of Illinois Chicago and the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine will partner with community organizations and sites to bring life-saving care closer to a highly vulnerable population – Black people with opioid use disorder.

Newswise: Unveiling the secrets of green pods: The role of soybean pods and seeds in photosynthesis
Released: 14-Jun-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Unveiling the secrets of green pods: The role of soybean pods and seeds in photosynthesis
Realizing Increased Photosynthetic Efficiency (RIPE) Project

Many people study photosynthesis in plant leaves, but since the pods and immature seeds (edamame) of soybean plants are also green, they are receiving chlorophyll and should be studied as well. Researchers with the RIPE Project discovered that chlorophyll in soybean pods plays a vital role in the plant’s photosynthetic process and significantly contributes to soybean yield.

Released: 14-Jun-2023 8:05 AM EDT
Technique Restores Healthy Bacterial Balance in C-Section Babies
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Newborns delivered by cesarean section who are swabbed with the vaginal fluid of their mothers after birth have beneficial bacteria restored to their skin surface and stools, according to a new study. In the first randomized study of its kind, published in the science journal mBio, a team of researchers found the process, known as vaginal seeding, definitively engrafted new strains of maternal bacteria in the babies’ bodies.

Newswise:Video Embedded rideshare-removes-hurdle-to-colonoscopy-pilot-study-shows
VIDEO
Released: 13-Jun-2023 5:35 PM EDT
Rideshare removes hurdle to colonoscopy, pilot study shows
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

In prior studies, explained senior author Dr. Rachel Issaka, transportation was cited as one of the main barriers to completing a colonoscopy. Issaka directs the UW Medicine/Fred Hutch Population Health Colorectal Cancer Screening Program and is an assistant professor of medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

Newswise: Meat processing plants: What factors are critical for survival?
Released: 13-Jun-2023 4:45 PM EDT
Meat processing plants: What factors are critical for survival?
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Meat processing plants in the U.S. have garnered considerable public attention in recent years, often focusing on production and labor issues. The COVID-19 pandemic underscored the vulnerability of large, concentrated plants, as major shutdowns led to reduced output and higher meat prices for consumers. Policy makers have launched initiatives at the state and federal levels to increase meat processing capacity and industry resilience, often favoring small and medium-sized plants. But little research exists to determine what factors make plants more likely to succeed. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign looks at meat processing plants across the United States, aiming to identify characteristics associated with plant survival and provide crucial information for legislators.

Released: 13-Jun-2023 3:55 PM EDT
Employee approval can make or break CEOS, UW research shows
University of Washington

New research from Bruce Avolio, professor of management in the University of Washington Foster School of Business, finds that employee approval greatly influences whether a board of directors will retain or dismiss a chief executive officer.

   
Newswise: McKee Foundation Awards Research Grant to TTUHSC El Paso’s Southwest Brain Bank
Released: 13-Jun-2023 12:30 PM EDT
McKee Foundation Awards Research Grant to TTUHSC El Paso’s Southwest Brain Bank
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

The Southwest Brain Bank's focus is on neuroscience research related to psychiatric illness. It is a research organization that collects, studies, and distributes donated brain tissue to scientists.

Newswise: Google announces $12m research program with local universities to bolster NYC’s cybersecurity leadership
Released: 12-Jun-2023 4:05 PM EDT
Google announces $12m research program with local universities to bolster NYC’s cybersecurity leadership
NYU Tandon School of Engineering

Google announced the Google Cyber NYC Institutional Research Program, allocating $12 million to stimulate the cybersecurity ecosystem and establish New York City as the global leader in cybersecurity. As part of this commitment, The City University of New York, Columbia University, Cornell University (including Cornell Tech and the Cornell Ann S. Bowers College of Computing and Information Science) and New York University will each receive $1 million in annual funding, each year through 2025.

Newswise:Video Embedded treadmill-for-microswimmers-allows-closer-look-at-behavior
VIDEO
Released: 12-Jun-2023 3:55 PM EDT
Treadmill for microswimmers allows closer look at behavior
Washington University in St. Louis

A new acoustic microfluidic method offers opportunities to conduct experiments with swimming cells and microorganisms. With it, ultrasonic waves like those used for imaging are able to hold a cell’s body in place without affecting the way it swims.

   
Newswise: Farm stressors affect mental health of adults and adolescent children
Released: 12-Jun-2023 2:55 PM EDT
Farm stressors affect mental health of adults and adolescent children
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Agriculture is a stressful occupation, and farmers face substantial mental health challenges. Research indicates they often experience higher levels of anxiety and depression compared to the general population, but less is known about the effects on their families. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign explores how economic stressors affect the mental health of U.S. farmers and their adolescent children.

   
Released: 12-Jun-2023 11:30 AM EDT
Excess physical activity can cause strain in young feet
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Summer sports are a great way to keep kids occupied, but too much activity can lead to weakened tendons



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