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$2.8 million NIH grant awarded to UH for bionano training
A $2,800,000 National Institutes of Health grant awarded to the University of Houston is not only expanding research, but
also preparing the next generation of scientists among Houston universities and medical schools.
The T90R90 grant, earmarked specifically for bionano training and research, was awarded to UH through the school's Institute
for Molecular Design (IMD) for the Keck Center for Computational and Structural Biology. The grant will be disbursed to
undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral students over the course of the next five years as competitive fellowships among
those at UH, Rice University, Baylor College of Medicine, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, The
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. These institutions
make up the Gulf Coast Consortia (GCC), a group designed to combine institutional strengths to train new scientists,
establish a research infrastructure to collect data, cultivate a supportive atmosphere for both biological and non-biological
researchers and students, and apply the resulting knowledge to prevent and treat diseases.
"This grant substantiates the fact that you can't separate research and training," said B. Montgomery Pettitt, principal
investigator for this grant and Cullen Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, professor of physics, biology and biochemistry,
and associate dean of computational and computer science for the UH College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. "Like
anything, research is a practiced art, and the discoveries that result are what come from hands-on training. Grants like this
give students experience in doing research, as well as helping them find out what areas they excel in and should likely
pursue further."
Just as the GCC melds training and research, this National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant reinforces a similar approach to
scientific education. All part of a new NIH roadmap initiative, the grant supports the shared vision of interdisciplinary
education to which the Keck center and GCC contribute.
The grant seeks to develop a new type of interdisciplinary scientist in the emerging field of nanobiology that draws upon the
interface and combines the tools, ideas and materials of nanoscience and biology. The new discipline will be characterized by
the interplay between current nanoscience applications in high technology and biotechnology and biomedical applications for
clinical and research medicine. The intended mission is to integrate the principles of nanoscale science and biology in
research and coursework to develop the first generation of nanobiologists. The result will be bionano research that examines
disease discovery, disease prevention and drug discovery, as well as laying the foundation for a new wave of scientific
discovery and applications to address health care, environmental monitoring and transportation.
"We're using the basic sciences as a springboard to branch out to more applied science through this grant," Pettitt said.
"Training is research in a lab. The traditional boxes of basic degrees that delineate disciplines no longer describe real
research."
Along those lines, what is especially innovative about this grant extends beyond just the recent money awarded. While UH is
the lead center and the fellowships are being administered through IMD, Pettitt's role as director of the Keck Center for
Computational and Structural Biology allows the grant to be shared among the member institutions of the GCC. With six
institutions and 40 other investigators besides Pettitt collaborating, students are able to take full advantage of the
various resources that each institution is uniquely capable of providing while still being able to claim a home base from
which they will receive their degrees.
"These vehicles allow us to put teams together in a meta-university of sorts," Pettitt said. "This is just the right thing
for student training and education. Through interdisciplinary and inter-institutional study, we can offer a custom-tailored
curriculum for each student that opens up the playing field to study at each university under different professors and
experts. This is how new ideas are born."
This has become a very effective recruiting tool for UH. Its "students are getting snapped up because industry demands
workers that are diverse and trained across the board." He emphasizes that this "no one size fits all" approach is a more
accurate reflection of the types of researchers needed for the scientific challenges that exist in today's society. With
applications already pouring in, he said they expect to begin handing out fellowships as early as this semester.
About the University of Houston
The University of Houston, Texas' premier metropolitan research and teaching institution, is home to more than 40 research
centers and institutes and sponsors more than 300 partnerships with corporate, civic and governmental entities. UH, the most
diverse research university in the country, stands at the forefront of education, research and service with more than 35,000
students.
For more information about the Institute for Molecular Design, visit http://www.chem.uh.edu/imd/index.html
For more information about the Keck Center for Computational and Structural Biology, visit http://cohesion.rice.edu/centersandinst/gcc/keck.cfm
For more information about the Gulf Coast Consortia, visit http://cohesion.rice.edu/centersandinst/gcc/gcc_about.cfm
For more information about UH, visit the university's Newsroom at http://www.uh.edu/newsroom
To receive UH science news via e-mail, visit http://www.uh.edu/admin/media/sciencelist.html
Contact: Lisa Merkl
lkmerkl@uh.edu
713-743-8192
University of Houston
2.8 milioane dolari nih subvenþie acordatã UH pentru bionano de formare - $2.8 million NIH grant awarded to UH for bionano training - articole medicale engleza - startsanatate