2011 INBRE PI & Program Coordinators Meeting
2011 INBRE Principal Investigators and Program Coordinators Meeting
Tuesday, October 4, 2011 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Hilton Washington DC/Rockville Executive Meeting Center
1750 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD 20852.
INBRE Agenda Slides for PI Meeting October 4, 2011
Presentations:
Evaluating INBRE Across the Nation: A look at what works and what challenges exist
Supporting a Diverse Pipeline from Pre-K to Graduate School
Successful INBRE Program Mentoring Parallels Exceptional Scientific Mentoring
Best Practices for the Development of Junior Research Faculty in the PUIs
eagle-i: making invisible resources visible
Pathways for Undergraduates to Discover Biomedical Research
Evaluating Undergraduate Research Experiences in teh Mountain West Consortium
EPSCoR/IDeA States’ National Organizations
Annual Progress Reports (APRs), Research Advances, et cetera
Recruiting & Mentoring Minority Students at the PUI
Impact of Using an External Evaluation Team
Layers of Assessment: Vermont INBRE Vermont Genetics Network (VGN)
Louisiana INBRE Program Evaluation: Integrating Evaluation and Mentoring for PUI Researchers
Mentoring Young Scientists in Translational Research
VIVO: enabling national networking of scientist to drive research forward
American Association for the Advancement of Science Research Competitiveness Program
Vermont Lung Center presents Pulmonary Research Group Symposium ~ October 21, 2011
The University of Vermont and the Vermont Lung Center present the
Fall 2011 Pulmonary Research Group Symposium
“Obesity: A Modifier of Immunity and Inflammation in the Lung”
October 21, 2011
Trapp Family Lodge ~ Stowe, Vermont
Program Organizers: Benjamin Suratt, MD, Anne Dixon, BM, BCh, and Lennart K.A. Lundblad, PhD, – University of Vermont
The world’s population is experiencing an unprecedented epidemic of obesity. Type 2 diabetes and hypertension diseases typically seen in the elderly – are now common in childhood. Once considered only a mechanical factor that could alter pulmonary physiology, it is now apparent that obesity can lead to profound changes in immunity and inflammation, having direct effects on a wide range of pulmonary diseases, including asthma, COPD, pneumonia and acute lung injury. We have invited leading obesity and lung disease researchers from across the United States and Australia and the Netherlands to attend a meeting with the purpose of reviewing the current state of knowledge pertaining to the effects of obesity on immunity and inflammation in the lung. The ultimate goal is to identify priorities for new research in this field. In addition to having access to leading researchers and cutting-edge talks, attendees will get to experience the spectacular fall foliage of Vermont at the Trapp Family Lodge.
Click HERE to register or learn more.
Vermont Genetics Network Advances Biomedical Research
Laughing babies, strange bacteria from the bottom of asbestos mines, and schizophrenic rats could be found in the DoubleTree Hotel in South Burlington. Well, really these were just topics in a few of the posters and talks presented during the annual retreat of the Vermont Genetics Network held there on Aug. 17.
But they highlight the range of research that the network has enabled over the last nine years. And with $16.1 million of new funding awarded from the National Institutes of Health in July of 2010, the group has accelerated its work of advancing biological and medical discoveries in Vermont.
“VGN helps faculty and students across the whole state,” says the University of Vermont’s Judith Van Houten, University Distinguished Professor of Biology and director of the Vermont Genetics Network located at UVM.
“The VGN builds biomedical research capacity at our many partner institutions,” she says. These include: Castleton State College, Green Mountain College, Johnson State College, Lyndon State College, Middlebury College, Norwich University and Saint Michael’s College.
Faculty at these schools and UVM apply for competitive grants from VGN that allow them to develop a record of research success. “Junior faculty are the highest priority,” explains Van Houten, and funding from VGN often allows these young scientists to spend about half their time on research.
In addition, the VGN runs microarray and proteomics facilities on the UVM campus that give researchers from across the state access to advanced capabilities in analyzing DNA, RNA, and proteins. Often this work is combined with consulting in the design and analysis of molecular biology experiments — through the VGN’s staff experts in bioinformatics.
The result, Van Houten says, is that Vermont faculty have access to world-class research tools and techniques that might otherwise be out of reach at schools that have traditionally focused on undergraduate teaching.
“This approach really supports biomedical workforce development in Vermont,” Van Houten says, “because it allows talented faculty in the colleges around the state to succeed with cutting-edge research. They then inspire their students — because they’re active researchers — to go on in biomedical careers, technical careers, or to medical schools.”
“We’ve had many faculty go on to get their own funding and then they don’t need funding any longer through VGN — that’s the goal,” Van Houten says. “The goal is to provide the capacity to make them competitive for national funding.”
Funded through the NIH’s National Center for Research Resources, the 2010 renewal of the Vermont Genetics Network relied on key support from US Senator Patrick Leahy. The $16.1 million represents the largest single-investigator grant — awarded to Judith Van Houten as the principal investigator overseeing the VGN — in UVM’s history.
“The funding is especially significant given the decrease in federal NIH funding levels on a national scale,” Van Houten said, “and as confirmation of the excellent scientific research contributions being conducted in Vermont.”
As the posters and presentations at the VGN’s annual retreat made clear: this investment is helping to unlock diverse questions in genetics — from the development of humor in infants (as studied by Gina Mireault a psychologist at Johnson State College) to insights into schizophrenia through rat studies (as developed by Mark Stefani, a professor at Middlebury College) — while building up the state’s next generation of scientists and doctors.
“UVM is the lead institution in the VGN,” Van Houten says, “but we’re truly a statewide network working on globally relevant problems.”
COBRE Funded Research in Nature Study
But many trauma victims don’t develop PTSD and doctors don’t have a biological test that they can rely on to diagnose who has the disorder — or to predict who is likely to get it.
Now, a team of researchers from the Emory University School of Medicine and the University of Vermont (UVM) have found that, in women, abnormal blood levels of a hormone called PACAP, produced in response to stress, are strongly linked to post-traumatic stress disorder.
Their study holds promise for developing blood and genetic tests that can identify those who have PTSD — “and this starts to give us tools to predict whether a patient is going to be susceptible to PTSD,” says the University of Vermont’s Victor May, a professor in the Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, who helped lead the study.




