Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Newswise: UTSW scientists eliminate key Alzheimer’s feature in animal model
Released: 29-Oct-2021 8:05 AM EDT
UTSW scientists eliminate key Alzheimer’s feature in animal model
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A study by UT Southwestern researchers finds that changing the biochemistry of parts of brain cells abolished the formation of amyloid beta plaques in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease. The finding, published in eLife, might eventually lead to treatments that prevent the memory-robbing condition in humans.

Newswise: Magnus Medical Launches with Breakthrough Device Designation for Rapid, Individualized Treatment of Major Depression and $25M in Series A Financing
Released: 29-Oct-2021 6:05 AM EDT
Magnus Medical Launches with Breakthrough Device Designation for Rapid, Individualized Treatment of Major Depression and $25M in Series A Financing
Magnus Medical

Magnus Medical, Inc., a medical device company, today announced that the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) has granted the company Breakthrough Device Designation for its individualized, rapid-acting, non-invasive neurostimulation technology designed to treat major depressive disorder (MDD) in people who have not improved sufficiently from antidepressant medication or other treatments.

   
Released: 29-Oct-2021 4:10 AM EDT
U of U Health leads national studies of “long COVID” in adults and during pregnancy
University of Utah Health

University of Utah Health scientists are on the leading edge of a pair of large studies investigating the long-term effects of COVID-19. The nationwide studies, supported by the National Institutes of Health, will attempt to answer key questions about the lingering effects of the viral disorder on pregnant individuals and their infants, as well as why some people develop post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC), including “long COVID,” and others don’t.

Released: 28-Oct-2021 5:25 PM EDT
A ‘Dented’ Internal Clock Provides Insight Into Shift Workers’ Weight Gain and Diabetes
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Weight gain and high blood sugar caused by a damaged internal clock was corrected by researchers, who changed the length of the “day” in mice

Newswise: U.S. Small Business Administration Awards ASBTDC $2.5 Million Grant for Community Navigator Pilot Program
Released: 28-Oct-2021 4:15 PM EDT
U.S. Small Business Administration Awards ASBTDC $2.5 Million Grant for Community Navigator Pilot Program
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The Arkansas Small Business and Technology Development Center at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a $2.5 million grant to engage in targeted outreach to small businesses in underserved communities. The U.S. Small Business Administration awarded the competitive funding under the Community Navigator Pilot Program administered by the SBA’s Office of Entrepreneurship Education.

Released: 28-Oct-2021 10:10 AM EDT
Personalized medicine research focuses on Hispanics with diabetes in South Texas
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

A team of researchers studying genetic data to identify hormone responses in a population of Mexican Americans with prediabetes, Type 2 diabetes, and obesity recently received a $3.5 million grant to fund a five-year study set to begin in late 2021.

Released: 28-Oct-2021 9:55 AM EDT
Area nonprofits receive $150,000 in grants from UT-Battelle
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

“The success of our community is a vital part of the lab’s mission,” said Alan Icenhour, deputy laboratory director for operations at ORNL. “We’re proud to support organizations that positively impact many lives in East Tennessee.”

Newswise: UC San Diego-Led Team Receives $9M to Advance Parkinson’s Disease Treatments
Released: 27-Oct-2021 2:50 PM EDT
UC San Diego-Led Team Receives $9M to Advance Parkinson’s Disease Treatments
UC San Diego Health

A new $9 million grant from Aligning Science Across Parkinson’s (ASAP) will enable advancement of UC San Diego’s discovery that inhibiting a single gene in mice converts other cell types directly into new neurons, alleviating all Parkinson’s symptoms.

Newswise: Albert Einstein Cancer Center Researcher Receives NCI Outstanding Investigator Award to Study Two Deadly Blood Diseases
Released: 27-Oct-2021 1:40 PM EDT
Albert Einstein Cancer Center Researcher Receives NCI Outstanding Investigator Award to Study Two Deadly Blood Diseases
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Ulrich G. Steidl, M.D., Ph.D., co-director of the Blood Cancer Institute and associate director of basic science at the Albert Einstein Cancer Center (AECC), has received a prestigious Outstanding Investigator Award from the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

Released: 27-Oct-2021 12:30 PM EDT
Wayne State receives $3.1 million grant to seek alternative sources of rare earth elements
Wayne State University Division of Research

A multidisciplinary team of researchers at Wayne State University have been awarded a $3.1 million grant from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ERDC program to seek alternative sources of rare earth elements critical to advanced military and consumer technologies.

Newswise: UA Little Rock Postdoctoral Researcher Receives $40K Grant to Create Predictive Modeling of Refugee Numbers
Released: 27-Oct-2021 11:45 AM EDT
UA Little Rock Postdoctoral Researcher Receives $40K Grant to Create Predictive Modeling of Refugee Numbers
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The Arkansas Economic Development Commission, using flow-through funding from the National Science Foundation, has awarded a postdoctoral research fellow at UA Little Rock a grant worth more than $40,000 to create a machine learning model to predict refugee counts in the United States.

Released: 27-Oct-2021 10:00 AM EDT
Gut-Brain Connection Research Gets Boost of $8.9 Million
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine is one of three research institutions with scientists awarded $8.9 million to study the growing body of evidence that Parkinson’s disease originates among cells in the gut and travels up the body’s neurons to the brain. The research aims to develop treatments to prevent or halt progression of the disease.

26-Oct-2021 8:05 AM EDT
Survival similar for younger and older patients with metastatic colorectal cancer, study finds
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Even though young patients with metastatic colorectal cancer tend to be more fit and receive more intensive treatment than older patients, both groups survive for roughly the same amount of time, according to a new study by Dana-Farber Cancer Institute investigators.

Newswise:Video Embedded utsw-scientists-identify-protein-that-stops-cell-cycle-in-response-to-stress
VIDEO
Released: 26-Oct-2021 8:05 PM EDT
UTSW scientists identify protein that stops cell cycle in response to stress
UT Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern researchers have identified a new mechanism by which stress causes cells to stop dividing.

   
Released: 26-Oct-2021 2:10 PM EDT
Project aims to improve accuracy of climate change models
Cornell University

With a three-year, $500,000 grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), scientists are working to improve climate models on which future water projections are based.

Released: 26-Oct-2021 1:45 PM EDT
DOD Funds $4.3-million Initiative to Improve Sleep, Clearance of the Brain
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

The U.S. Department of Defense is funding the first human trial of a device to speed up and enhance the natural system of brain cleansing that occurs when we sleep.

   
Released: 26-Oct-2021 11:30 AM EDT
NIH Awards Grant to Study Combination Treatment for Pain to Wake Forest School of Medicine
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist

Chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) – daily pain in the muscles, bones, ligaments, tendons and nerves that lasts for six months or longer – contributes to approximately 21% of worker disability issues in this country and costs $500 billion annually from lost wages, treatment and medications, according to a study conducted by Johns Hopkins University. In an effort to develop a more effective strategy against this debilitating condition, a team of doctors and researchers at Wake Forest School of Medicine has received a four-year grant of approximately $4 million from the National Institutes of Health.

Released: 26-Oct-2021 11:00 AM EDT
Statins Likely Not Helpful In Reducing Covid-19 Mortality or Severity
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Findings from a recent Johns Hopkins Medicine-led study of nearly 4,500 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 over a four-month period provide a stronger case for a very different conclusion: Statins likely did not confer any impact — positive or negative — on COVID-related mortality and may be associated with an significantly increased risk — nearly 1 chance in 5 — of more serious illness.

25-Oct-2021 7:00 AM EDT
Release of Chemical Dopamine in Infant Brains May Help Control Early Social Development
NYU Langone Health

Changing levels of the chemical dopamine, a chemical most associated with motivation, may help explain why stressful experiences during infancy can lead to lasting behavioral issues, a new study in rodents shows.

Released: 26-Oct-2021 9:55 AM EDT
Coffee and the Effects of Climate Change
Tufts University

Systematic review highlights the vulnerability of coffee quality to environmental shifts associated with climate change and practices to mitigate the effects. Findings have implications for farmer livelihoods, consumer sensory experiences, and future strategies to support farms and product.



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