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Apply Today for these open Indiana CTSI Grants

Author: Bruce Melancon

There are currently four open Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute grant opportunities. The Indiana CTSI is seeking applicants for the Collaboration in Translational Research (CTR) Pilot Grant Program. The objective of the Indiana CTSI CTR pilot grant program is to foster and encourage collaboration across the Indiana CTSI partner...

Warren Center faculty member presents at the Solutions for Drug-Resistant Infections Conference (SDRI 2017)

Author: Richard Taylor

Professsor Marv Miller presented the seminar, “Conjugation of an acinetobacter selective sideophore to Daptomycin generates a sideromycin with potent activity against acinetobacter baumannii” at the Antimicrobial Drug Discovery Symposium at the Solutions for Drug-Resistant Infections (SDRI) conference in Brisbane, Australia, April 3-5. SDRI 2017 brought together leading scientific, medical and industry experts to discuss new...
Research Sparks Economic Growth

Funding Scientific Research fuels Job Creation

Author: Brandi Klingerman

The University of Notre Dame is highlighted in a new report on the importance of scientific research to economic growth. The study, which was conducted by The Science Coalition, identifies more than 100 companies that exist due to funding received by academic researchers from federal government agencies, including the Department...
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2017 Research Like a Champion Award Winners

Author: Jenna Bilinski

Congratulations to the 2017 Research Like a Champion program winners. This was the most successful year for the program with the highest number of applicants and the most innovative projects.  Students: Marwa Asem and Carlysa Oyama Project Title: Tunneling Nanotubes in Cancer: When Your Healthy Cells Betray Your Body Mentor:...
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Notre Dame’s Genomics and Bioinformatics Core Facility Acquires New Equipment

Author: Brandi Klingerman

The new system for high-throughput sequencing supports health and environmental research From cancer to vector-borne diseases, and from drug development to monitoring invasive species, DNA sequencing is vital to the research being done at the University of Notre Dame. To support these research efforts, the Genomics and Bioinformatics Core Facility...
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Kasturi Haldar wins 2017 Ganey Award for community-based research

Author: JP Shortall

  Professor Kasturi Haldar has received the 2016 Rodney F. Ganey, Ph.D., Community-Based Research Award for a project that has helped improve rare disease recognition and treatment in northern Indiana. The award is a $5,000 prize presented annually to a regular faculty member at the University of Notre Dame who has completed at least...
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Research Supported by the Ara Parseghian Medical Research Fund Reaches Important Milestone

Author: Sean Kassen

Niemann-Pick Type C (NPC) disease is a rare, genetic, cholesterol storage disorder that is always fatal, primarily striking children before or during adolescence, and it has a long history with the Notre Dame family. In 1994, Notre Dame alumni Cindy and Michael Parseghian founded the Ara Parseghian Medical Research Foundation...
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Tuberculosis Research Sheds Light on Disease-related Protein

Author: Brandi Klingerman

The WHO names Tuberculosis (TB) as one of the top 10 causes of death worldwide and over 95 percent of those deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. To improve the global health community’s understanding of TB and provide information that could help treat it, Notre Dame researchers have developed...
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Notre Dame Professor Siyuan Zhang wins CTSI grant

Author: Cliff Djajapranata

  Siyuan Zhang, Nancy Dee Assistant Professor of Cancer Research, Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences and affiliated member of Harper Cancer Research Institute at the University of Notre Dame, recently won a grant from the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute (CTSI). Awarded Pilot Funding for Research Use of Core...

Researchers track perfluorinated chemicals in the body

Author: Jessica Sieff

New research in the journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters shows scientists have developed a method to track perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) in the body. PFAS are potentially toxic chemicals found in stain-resistant products, nonstick cookware, fire-fighting foams and — most recently — fast food wrappers. For the first time,...
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Tuberculosis: The Disease of Antiquity

Author: Jessica Sieff

Jeff Schorey In the time it takes to read this article, half a dozen people will have died from tuberculosis (TB). It is a cruel and persistent killer, claiming 1.8 million lives each year, an estimated 200,000 of which are children, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Considering the...

Competition challenges graduate students to explain their research in three minutes

Author: Sue Ryan

Click for larger image Nine University of Notre Dame graduate students will compete for prize money while attempting to explain their research in three minutes during the third annual Shaheen Three Minute Thesis competition on Monday (March 27). Known as 3MT, the goal of the competition is for Ph.D. students...
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WHO's list of Priority Pathogen's and Antibiotic Research in the Warren Center

Author: Richard Taylor

February 28, 2017 – For the first time, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of “priority pathogens” which constitute a current and extreme threat to human health. WHO is seeking to promote new efforts in the discovery and development of new antibiotics to address a growing threat of...
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Expanding new areas of rare disease research at Notre Dame

Author: Chontel Syfox and Tammi Freehling

Coinciding with the World Rare Disease Day, Notre Dame acknowledges a recent, generous gift from Notre Dame parents David and Cathleen Reisenauer of Morgan Hill, Calif., which will allow the Warren Family Research Center for Drug Discovery and Development to initiate a new area of research, focusing on the rare...

Finalists Named in Hotly Contested Shaheen 3MT® Science Qualifying Round

Author: Aaron Bell

Left to right: Finalists Julia Beck, Elizabeth Loughran and Stefan Freed The College of Science Shaheen 3MT competition began with a big bang on Monday in Jordan Hall of Science. Julia Beck (Biochemistry), Elizabeth Loughran (Integrated Biomedical Sciences), and Stefan Freed (Biological Sciences) took the top three spots, and will...
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Rare Disease Day 2017 and Rare Disease Research within the Warren Center

Author: Warren Family Center

Rare Disease Day takes place annually on the last day of February. Its goal is to raise awareness amongst the general public and policy-makers. Global Genes maintains the RARE List™ of 7,000 rare diseases defined in the United States where a prevalence of less than 200,000 cases is the primary...
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Notre Dame biologist Cody Smith wins prestigious Sloan Research Fellowship

Author: Chontel Syfox

Cody J. Smith, the Elizabeth and Michael Gallagher Assistant Professor of Neural Development and Regeneration, has been selected as a 2017 recipient of the prestigious Sloan Research Fellowship. Every year the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation selects 126 promising early-career scholars from the fields of science, engineering, technology, mathematics, and economics,...
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New Research Addresses Complexity of Neglected Tropical Disease (NTD) Control

Author: Sarah Craig

The University of Notre Dame’s Edwin Michael, Professor, Department of Biological Sciences and member of the Eck Institute for Global Health, is on the cutting edge of an initiative to address the sociology of disease transmission and control, by factoring in the impacts that complex transmission dynamics and social determinants...
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Rare Disease Day Celebration highlights neglected diseases

Author: Deanna Csomo McCool

Kasturi Haldar, Director of the Boler-Parseghian Center for Rare and Neglected Diseases, (left) discusses one of the posters, about Neurofibromatosis 1, with biological science graduate student Stefan Freed and Brooke Gonzalez, a Notre Dame senior. Research has been performed on only about 300 of the 7,000 known diseases, according to...
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Shirey named second Notre Dame student to present at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Author: Grant Johnson

Biochemistry graduate student Carolyn Shirey has been selected to attend the 2017 National Graduate Student Symposium (NGSS) at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Selection in the NGSS is extraordinarily competitive as application is by invitation only. Over 1,500 students were invited to apply for the 2017 symposium...
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NDnano Symposium: Nanotechnology in the Treatment of Neurodegenerative Disorders

Author: Heidi Deethardt

NDnano is hosting a one-day symposium on Thursday, ​March 30 entitled "Nanotechnology in the Treatment of Neurodegenerative Disorders." The keynote will be given by Kevin Tracey, M.D., President & CEO of the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research. Students are welcome and encouraged to attend the technical session and/or present their own...
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International Collaboration Provides Notre Dame Students with Unparalleled Opportunity

Author: Tammi Freehling and Cliff Djajapranata

For decades, professor Paul Helquist has partnered with colleagues in Sweden to send undergraduate and graduate chemistry students to each others’ laboratories—around 50 in total—to perform research at Notre Dame, the University of Stockholm, Gothenburg University, the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm as well as the Astra Zeneca pharmaceutical...

Researchers study potential cause of birth defect

Author: Brandi Klingerman

Paul Huber and Norman Dovichi are exploring how a disruption to the SUMO protein’s ability to regulate embryo development may be linked to congenital heart defects.
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Alex Perkins named Early Career Fellow by the Ecological Society of America

Author: Grant Johnson

The University of Notre Dame’s Alex Perkins, Eck Family Assistant Professor, and member of the Department of Biological Sciences, the Department of Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics, the Eck Institute for Global Health, and the Environmental Change Initiative, was named a 2017 Early Career Fellow by the Ecological Society...

Biocomputing: Imitating the Real Thing to Improve Life

Author: Nina Welding

Pinar Zorlutuna and a team of University researchers have created a new type of diode, one that is made entirely of cardiac muscle cells and fibroblasts. Their recently published paper titled “Muscle-Cell-Based ‘Living Diodes’” discusses how using muscle cells as the diode components is ideal for cell-based information processing. An...
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Zika: Where are We Now?

Author: Jessica Sieff

It’s been one year since the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Zika a public health emergency. The virus, transmitted through the Aedes aegypti mosquito, has since been declared to be a long-term problem rather than an emergency, but Zika continues to concern health professionals. At the Eck Institute for Global...
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Grad student will present new cancer findings at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

Author: Grant Johnson

Biological sciences graduate student Joshua Mason has been selected to attend the 2017 National Graduate Student Symposium (NGSS) at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. Selection in the NGSS is extraordinarily competitive as application is by invitation only. Over 1,500 students were invited to apply for the 2017...

Research reveals a triple-drug regimen that could eliminate elephantiasis

Author: Gene Stowe

A collaborative modeling study among three research groups, including Edwin Michael’s laboratory in the Department of Biological Sciences, reveals that a triple-drug regimen could accelerate the elimination of lymphatic filariasis, a mosquito-borne parasitic disease also known as elephantiasis. The study, which shows that the regimen requires far fewer applications than...

Interdisciplinary Collaboration Leads to Revised Model of Brain Activity

Author: Tammi Freehling

Assistant Professor Robert Rosenbaum, in the Department of Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics (ACMS), coauthored a paper that was recently published in the journal Nature Neuroscience titled “The spatial structure of correlated neuronal variability.” In the paper, a culmination of research in collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh, the...

Prof. Brian Baker’s lab receives $4 million NIH grant for precision immunotherapy research

Author: Tammi Freehling

Immunologists are changing how we look at cancer by studying how our immune system plays a role in treating cancer. Brian Baker, Ph.D., and his lab in the Harper Cancer Research Institute and Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry were recently awarded a $4 million, 5-year grant from the National Institutes...