Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Newswise: Multistate project aims to diversify Corn Belt
Released: 19-Jan-2023 2:50 PM EST
Multistate project aims to diversify Corn Belt
Iowa State University

With a five-year, $10 million federal grant, a team of researchers from Iowa, Indiana and Illinois are working to plant the seeds for greater crop diversity in the Midwest.

Newswise: Wistar Institute HIV Researchers Win Grant to Explore Genetically Engineered Natural Killer Cells as HIV Therapy
Released: 19-Jan-2023 2:35 PM EST
Wistar Institute HIV Researchers Win Grant to Explore Genetically Engineered Natural Killer Cells as HIV Therapy
Wistar Institute

amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, has awarded Luis J. Montaner, D.V.M., D.Phil., in collaboration with Mohamed Abdel-Mohsen, Ph.D., a Target Grant for $397,663 over two years.

Released: 19-Jan-2023 1:20 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $200 Million for Energy Earthshot Research Centers in support of the Energy Earthshots™
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $200 million for Energy Earthshot Research Centers (EERCs). This funding, provided by the Office of Science, will support fundamental research to accelerate breakthroughs in support of the Energy Earthshots Initiative.

Newswise: Ag engineer to use AI to assess crop damage after tropical storms, hurricanes
Released: 19-Jan-2023 12:00 PM EST
Ag engineer to use AI to assess crop damage after tropical storms, hurricanes
University of Florida

A University of Florida scientist receives a national Institute of Food and Agriculture grant to develop a computer model using his existing technology to more quickly and accurately count damaged or dead crops.

Released: 18-Jan-2023 3:35 PM EST
Big Data Research into Leading Cause of Childhood Blindness Gets Boost from FDA Grant
American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO)

The FDA awarded the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Verana Health funding to support research into pediatric cataract surgery.

Released: 18-Jan-2023 12:10 PM EST
Revealing the Thermal Heat Dance of Magnetic Domains
Brookhaven National Laboratory

A collaboration led by scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory, Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and the Max Born Institute (MBI) published a study in Nature in which they used a novel analysis technique—called coherent correlation imaging (CCI)—to image the evolution of magnetic domains in time and space without any previous knowledge. The scientists could not see the “dance of the domains” during the measurement but only afterward, when they used the recorded data to “rewind the tape.”

Newswise: Durable SARS-CoV-2 antibodies bind to two viral targets at once
Released: 17-Jan-2023 4:20 PM EST
Durable SARS-CoV-2 antibodies bind to two viral targets at once
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

A new study led by scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) shows how ideal antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 hit their marks. Now scientists are looking at how we might harness their power in new antibody therapeutics and even more effective COVID-19 vaccines.

   
Newswise: Researchers will harness machine learning to provide residents with personalized warnings for heat emergencies
Released: 17-Jan-2023 3:25 PM EST
Researchers will harness machine learning to provide residents with personalized warnings for heat emergencies
Iowa State University

An automated heat alert system built using innovative machine learning technology could improve preparedness for extreme heat. A research team lead by Iowa State University has received a $1.2 million grant from the National Science Foundation to gather data and develop an automated heat warning system for susceptible Des Moines neighborhoods.

Released: 17-Jan-2023 2:40 PM EST
DOE Announces $2.3 Million for Public-Private Partnerships to Advance Fusion Energy
Department of Energy, Office of Science

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced $2.3 million in funding for 10 projects that will pair private industry with DOE’s National Laboratories to overcome challenges in fusion energy development, an area of research that captivated global attention in December when the Department announced that a team at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory had achieved fusion ignition. Ignition, in which more energy was derived from fusion than was put into it, had never been accomplished before in a laboratory setting and raised hopes that fusion energy could play a major role in the transition to clean energy.

Released: 17-Jan-2023 8:30 AM EST
Columbia Nursing Ranks #1 in NIH Funding
Columbia University School of Nursing

Columbia Nursing ranks first among U.S. nursing schools in NIH research funding for FY 2022.

Newswise: Wearable, Printable, Shapeable Sensors Detect Pathogens and Toxins in the Environment
Released: 17-Jan-2023 8:05 AM EST
Wearable, Printable, Shapeable Sensors Detect Pathogens and Toxins in the Environment
Tufts University

Researchers at Tufts University have created a biopolymer sensor that can be printed on or embedded in wide range of materials, including gloves, masks, and everyday clothing. The sensor lights up when exposed to specific pathogens, toxins, proteins, or chemicals.

Newswise: Let’s clear things up: how do glassfrogs achieve transparency?
Released: 13-Jan-2023 11:05 AM EST
Let’s clear things up: how do glassfrogs achieve transparency?
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Using state-of-the-art imaging technology, NIH-funded researchers have found the secret behind the glassfrog’s ability to become transparent, an effective form of camouflage. Future research may provide insights into disorders related to blood clotting or stroke in humans.

Released: 13-Jan-2023 9:55 AM EST
Support from others in stressful times can ease impact of genetic depression risk, study suggests
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Reaching out to support a person when they’re under stress is always a good idea. But a new study suggests that support could be especially important for someone whose genetic makeup makes them more likely to develop depression.

   
11-Jan-2023 1:15 PM EST
Gut bacteria affect brain health, mouse study shows
Washington University in St. Louis

Gut bacteria can influence brain health, according to a study of mice genetically predisposed to develop Alzheimer’s-like brain damage. The study, by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, indicates that gut bacteria produce compounds that influence the behavior of immune cells, including ones in the brain that can cause neurodegeneration. The findings suggest a new approach to treating Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases.

Newswise: Researchers Receive $2.1 Million Grant to Study Diet Interventions in Older Adults
Released: 12-Jan-2023 1:15 PM EST
Researchers Receive $2.1 Million Grant to Study Diet Interventions in Older Adults
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Maintaining a healthy weight during the golden years is a priority for many older adults. While previous research has shown that cutting calories can lower disease risk factors, it's unclear whether it can have a long-term positive impact on disease and disability. With a $2.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine will evaluate the potential benefits of diet interventions such as time-restricted eating and caloric restriction.

Newswise: LJI scientists solve the mystery of why OGT enzyme is critical for cell survival
Released: 12-Jan-2023 1:10 PM EST
LJI scientists solve the mystery of why OGT enzyme is critical for cell survival
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

LA JOLLA, CA — Researchers at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) have at last uncovered how an enzyme called O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT) keeps cells healthy. Their findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, reveals a key aspect of cellular biology and may lead to important medical advances.

   
Newswise:Video Embedded university-of-utah-college-of-engineering-receives-historic-gift
VIDEO
Released: 11-Jan-2023 2:25 PM EST
University of Utah College of Engineering receives historic gift
University of Utah

The college is proud to announce a historic $50 million gift from the John and Marcia Price Family Foundation that will benefit future students, educational programs, research centers and entrepreneurism, as well as the construction of a new $190 million computing and engineering building on the U campus. The college will be renamed the University of Utah John and Marcia Price College of Engineering pending review and approval by the university’s Board of Trustees at its meeting on Feb. 14.

9-Jan-2023 5:40 PM EST
Some hospitalized patients’ infections may develop from their own bacteria
Washington University in St. Louis

The opportunistic bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii rarely sickens healthy people but causes serious infections in hospitalized patients. A study, in mice, from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis suggests that Acinetobacter can hide undetected in bladder cells and then reactivate when stimulated by medical intervention. The findings suggest that patients may bring Acinetobacter into hospitals and that screening patients could supplement current infection-control efforts.

Released: 11-Jan-2023 1:35 PM EST
Penn Medicine CAREs Grants Continue to Support Community Service Projects, Increasing Access to Medical Care
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Twenty-seven Penn Medicine employees and medical students recently received Penn Medicine CAREs grants for projects designed to improve wellbeing, health equity, and inclusion in the region’s most diverse and underserved populations. In addition, HopePHL was selected as the Penn Medicine CAREs Community Champion for 2022.

Newswise: Tiny robots delivering mechanical cures
Released: 11-Jan-2023 8:05 AM EST
Tiny robots delivering mechanical cures
University of Delaware

A team of University of Delaware researchers will use a $2 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant to create microrobots smaller than a human cell and work with “active matter,” exploring how to embed the rudimentary intelligence of single-cell organisms into these robotic creations.

Released: 10-Jan-2023 1:55 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $17 Million for Small Business Research and Development Grants
Department of Energy, Office of Science

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced awards totaling $17 million for small businesses in 25 states. The 77 projects are in the fields of advanced scientific computing and scientific instrumentation that support DOE’s clean energy mission.

Newswise: SUNY Geneseo and NOAA Ocean Exploration Bring Deep Sea to Undergrad Classroom
9-Jan-2023 7:05 AM EST
SUNY Geneseo and NOAA Ocean Exploration Bring Deep Sea to Undergrad Classroom
State University of New York at Geneseo

The article shares lessons from SUNY Geneseo’s Marine Biology course and presents a model for bringing deep-sea research into undergraduate classrooms. Access to the deep oceans is limited to a select number of researchers, in large part due to the costs of ship time.

Newswise: Some forms of childhood malnutrition, stunting may be preventable with vaccines
Released: 9-Jan-2023 6:00 PM EST
Some forms of childhood malnutrition, stunting may be preventable with vaccines
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered that vaccinating mice against a toxin produced by the bacterium E. coli can prevent intestinal damage, a finding that suggests new ways to prevent malnutrition and stunting in children.

Newswise: Families with Food Insecurity Have Greater Health Care Expenditures
6-Jan-2023 3:20 PM EST
Families with Food Insecurity Have Greater Health Care Expenditures
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine are reporting the results of a new study that shows food-insecure families have higher health care expenditures than families that are food secure.

Released: 9-Jan-2023 1:30 PM EST
Study finds increase in women 65 and older dying of cervical cancer
UC Davis Health

Findings from a UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center study prompt researchers to question current cervical cancer screening guidelines for older women.

Released: 9-Jan-2023 1:25 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $56 Million for Traineeships Supporting Historically Underrepresented Groups and Institutions
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $56 million to provide research opportunities to historically underrepresented groups and institutions in STEM. The funding, through the DOE Office of Science’s Reaching a New Energy Sciences Workforce (RENEW) initiative, will support internships, mentorship, and training programs at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), other Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs), and other research institutions. These investments will diversify American leadership in the physical, biological, and computational sciences to ensure America’s best and brightest students have pathways to STEM fields.

Newswise: Researchers receive grant to study how fungal pathogens become drug-resistant
Released: 9-Jan-2023 9:00 AM EST
Researchers receive grant to study how fungal pathogens become drug-resistant
Clemson University

The study will concentrate on azalea compounds, a class of fungicides widely used in agriculture and to treat human infections.

   
Newswise: Study reveals average age at conception for men versus women over past 250,000 years
Released: 6-Jan-2023 2:35 PM EST
Study reveals average age at conception for men versus women over past 250,000 years
Indiana University

Using a new method based upon comparing DNA mutation rates between parents and offspring, evolutionary biologists at Indiana University have for the first time revealed the average age of mothers versus fathers over the past 250,000 years, including the discovery that the age gap is shrinking, with women's average age at conception increasing from 23.2 years to 26.4 years, on average, in the past 5,000 years.

   
Released: 6-Jan-2023 12:40 PM EST
Organelles grow in random bursts
Washington University in St. Louis

New experiments that show that eukaryotic cells can robustly control average fluctuations in organelle size. By demonstrating that organelle sizes obey a universal scaling relationship that the scientists predict theoretically, their new framework suggests that organelles grow in random bursts from a limiting pool of building blocks.

Newswise: Columbia University and Partners Win $35M JUMP 2.0 Grant to Create Center for Ubiquitous Connectivity
Released: 5-Jan-2023 2:10 PM EST
Columbia University and Partners Win $35M JUMP 2.0 Grant to Create Center for Ubiquitous Connectivity
Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science

Columbia Engineering has won a $35 million five-year grant to establish the Center for Ubiquitous Connectivity (CUbiC) and advance energy-efficient communications technologies for addressing the vastly growing connectivity bottlenecks between data-hungry wireless devices and deluged data centers. Over the next five years, CUbiC will strive to flatten the computation-communication gap, delivering seamless Edge-to-Cloud connectivity with transformational reductions in the global system energy consumption.

Released: 5-Jan-2023 1:50 PM EST
Texas Tech’s Ardon-Dryer Receives National Science Foundation Grant
Texas Tech University

The NSF grant will fund a three-year project to create a comprehensive database for dust storms and dust events.

Newswise: Wayne State receives $1.7 million NIH award to understand and address ototoxic side effects of anti-cancer drug
Released: 5-Jan-2023 8:00 AM EST
Wayne State receives $1.7 million NIH award to understand and address ototoxic side effects of anti-cancer drug
Wayne State University Division of Research

Wayne State's Dr. Jamesdaniel received a $1.7 million NIH grant to study cisplatin, a drug that is prescribed to 10 to 20% of cancer patients that causes hearing loss in up to 80% treated with the drug.

Newswise: Cyclone researchers: Warming climate means more and stronger Atlantic tropical storms
Released: 4-Jan-2023 4:30 PM EST
Cyclone researchers: Warming climate means more and stronger Atlantic tropical storms
Iowa State University

Researchers report a warming climate could increase the number and intensity of tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic, potentially creating more and stronger hurricanes. Researchers also examine a possible explanation for the relatively constant number of tropical cyclones around the globe every year.

Newswise: Potential New Targets Identified in Advanced Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
3-Jan-2023 1:45 PM EST
Potential New Targets Identified in Advanced Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Mount Sinai Health System

Using the latest technologies—including both single-nuclear sequencing of mice and human liver tissue and advanced 3D glass imaging of mice to characterize key scar-producing liver cells—researchers have uncovered novel candidate drug targets for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The research was led by investigators at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Utilizing these innovative methods, the investigators discovered a network of cell-to-cell communication driving scarring as liver disease advances. The findings, published online on January 4 in Science Translational Medicine, could lead to new treatments.

Newswise: Here Today, Gone Tomorrow: How Humans Lost Their Body Hair
Released: 4-Jan-2023 1:10 PM EST
Here Today, Gone Tomorrow: How Humans Lost Their Body Hair
University of Utah Health

Orangutans, mice, and horses are covered with it, but humans aren’t. Why we have significantly less body hair than most other mammals has long remained a mystery. But a first-of-its-kind comparison of genetic codes from 62 animals is beginning to tell the story of how people—and other mammals—lost their locks.

Newswise: A Three-Dose Malaria Vaccine Shows Safety, Efficacy in West African Adults
Released: 4-Jan-2023 12:55 PM EST
A Three-Dose Malaria Vaccine Shows Safety, Efficacy in West African Adults
University of Maryland School of Medicine

A three-dose regimen of a whole-parasite vaccine against malaria – called Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite (PfSPZ) vaccine – demonstrated safety and efficacy when tested in adults living in Burkina Faso, West Africa, which has endemic malaria.

Newswise: SLU Researcher, Collaborators Awarded NSF Grant to Create Software System that Generates Accessible STEM Content for Persons with Disabilities
Released: 4-Jan-2023 10:05 AM EST
SLU Researcher, Collaborators Awarded NSF Grant to Create Software System that Generates Accessible STEM Content for Persons with Disabilities
Saint Louis University

A collaborative team of academia, industry, start-ups, and non-profits, led by Jenna Gorlewicz, Ph.D., associate professor in aerospace and mechanical engineering and associate dean of research and innovation in the School of Science and Engineering at Saint Louis University, was awarded a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to develop technology to enhance the quality of life, employment access, and opportunities for persons with disabilities.

3-Jan-2023 10:00 AM EST
Penn Medicine Awarded $9.7 Million from The Warren Alpert Foundation for Genetic Counselor Continuing Education Efforts
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Penn Medicine has received a $9.7 million grant from The Warren Alpert Foundation (WAF) that will fund continuing education efforts for genetic counselors, to ensure opportunities for continued training that will keep them on the leading edge of their profession interpreting genomic data and explaining its implications to patients.

Newswise: UTEP Receives $5M NSF Grant to Support High-Potential Computer Science Students
Released: 3-Jan-2023 2:40 PM EST
UTEP Receives $5M NSF Grant to Support High-Potential Computer Science Students
University of Texas at El Paso

UTEP received a $5 million grant from NSF to provide financial support and professional development experiences to talented students in the field of computer science. The initiative will provide partial scholarships to 26 students at UTEP and to 15 students who start their college education at EPCC.

Newswise: Taming Overactive mTOR in Renal Cell Cancer
Released: 3-Jan-2023 11:00 AM EST
Taming Overactive mTOR in Renal Cell Cancer
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a new study from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center, researchers described a novel mechanism of tumor formation in kidney cancers.

Released: 29-Dec-2022 4:05 PM EST
The American Macular Degeneration Foundation Drives Research and Hope With New Grants
American Macular Degeneration Foundation (AMDF)

The foundation is investing $1.1 million in studies that hold the potential to set new standards in the prevention and treatment of age-related macular degeneration

   
Released: 28-Dec-2022 9:15 AM EST
Hackensack Meridian Health Foundation Awarded $250,000 Grant from TD Bank to Support NJ InCK Program and Support Children’s Health
Hackensack Meridian Health

Hackensack Meridian Health Foundation Awarded $250,000 Grant from TD Bank to Support NJ InCK Program and Support Children’s Health

Released: 27-Dec-2022 2:05 PM EST
Researchers ID Protein That May Protect the Heart During Certain Cancer Treatment Regimens
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Researchers identified a protein linked with the onset of anthracycline-associated cardiac toxicity. In two studies conducted in women undergoing treatment for breast cancer, levels of a protein known as hemopexin circulating in the blood were associated with increased cardiac toxicity.

Newswise: When Grandpa Can’t Hear Words at a Noisy Holiday Gathering, Too Many Brain Cells May Be Firing at Once, Say Researchers
Released: 22-Dec-2022 1:30 PM EST
When Grandpa Can’t Hear Words at a Noisy Holiday Gathering, Too Many Brain Cells May Be Firing at Once, Say Researchers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Looking for answers about how the brain works amid age-related hearing loss, Johns Hopkins Medicine researchers say they found that old mice were less capable than young mice of “turning off” certain actively firing brain cells in the midst of ambient noise.

Newswise: Rewriting the Textbook on Gene Regulation: It’s the Big Picture That Counts
Released: 22-Dec-2022 11:05 AM EST
Rewriting the Textbook on Gene Regulation: It’s the Big Picture That Counts
University of California San Diego

For the first time, researchers at UC San Diego have shown that changes in gene expression happen almost entirely during the transcription stage while the cells are growing. The researchers have provided a simple quantitative formula linking regulatory control to mRNA and protein levels.

Newswise: Found! Lost Puzzle Piece Involved in Gene Regulation Revealed in Search That Began in Water-Loving, One-Celled Organism
Released: 22-Dec-2022 10:00 AM EST
Found! Lost Puzzle Piece Involved in Gene Regulation Revealed in Search That Began in Water-Loving, One-Celled Organism
Johns Hopkins Medicine

After an intrepid, decade-long search, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found a new role for a pair of enzymes that regulate genome function and, when missing or mutated, are linked to diseases such as brain tumors, blood cancers and Kleefstra syndrome — a rare genetic, neurocognitive disorder.

21-Dec-2022 5:40 PM EST
Research to Prevent Blindness Marks $400 Million in Funding to Advance Eye Disease Research
Research to Prevent Blindness

Research to Prevent Blindness announces a new round of awardees who are generating critical knowledge around a host of sight-threatening conditions. With this latest round of funding, RPB has provided more than $400 million in research funding.

Newswise: Sotorasib shows clinically meaningful activity in KRAS G12C-mutated advanced pancreatic cancer
21-Dec-2022 12:55 PM EST
Sotorasib shows clinically meaningful activity in KRAS G12C-mutated advanced pancreatic cancer
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

In the Phase I/II CodeBreaK 100 trial, the KRAS G12C inhibitor sotorasib achieved meaningful anticancer activity with an acceptable safety profile in heavily pretreated patients with KRAS G12C-mutated metastatic pancreatic cancer, according to researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

Newswise: At the Edge of Graphene-Based Electronics
Released: 21-Dec-2022 4:10 PM EST
At the Edge of Graphene-Based Electronics
Georgia Institute of Technology

Researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a new graphene-based nanoelectronics platform that could be the key to finding a successor to silicon. The team may have also discovered a new quasiparticle. Their discovery could lead to manufacturing smaller, faster, more efficient, and more sustainable computer chips, and has potential implications for quantum and high-performance computing.

Newswise: Digital Marker for Coronary Artery Disease Built by Researchers at Mount Sinai
19-Dec-2022 7:00 PM EST
Digital Marker for Coronary Artery Disease Built by Researchers at Mount Sinai
Mount Sinai Health System

Using machine learning and clinical data from electronic health records, researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York constructed an in silico, or computer-derived, marker for coronary artery disease (CAD) to better measure clinically important characterizations of the disease.



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