| UAMS, Partners Receive $6 Million for Biomedical Research Network UAMS and two partner campuses have received a $6 million, three-year grant to create a network of high-powered research laboratories and expand Arkansas’s biotechnology workforce. |
|
Home
|
SEPT. 28, 2001 | The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and two partner campuses have received a $6 million, three-year grant to create a network of high-powered research laboratories and expand Arkansas’s biotechnology workforce. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded the grant to UAMS to form the network with the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville (UAF) and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR). Each campus will bring separate, complementary strengths to the project, which Director Lawrence E. Cornett, Ph.D., predicts will enhance the biomedical research resources in Arkansas and improve the state’s position in the biotechnology industry. (See examples of the research the network will foster in a video.) The new project, called a Biomedical Research Infrastructure Network (BRIN), will have three major goals: to stimulate more proposals from Arkansas scientists for federal grants in the biomedical sciences; and to advance statewide expertise in the rapidly developing disciplines of bioinformatics, genomics, proteomics, and digital microscopy, as related to biomedical research and the biotechnology industry. Bioinformatics is the emerging discipline that uses powerful computational resources for analyzing, storing, and communicating large volumes of biological information from genomic and proteomic research. This discipline includes database development, data mining, and many other applications of computer technology to biological problems. Proteomics is a discipline involving the characterization of proteins, their structure, and function. Through identification of proteins and understanding their biological function, proteomics proposes to determine their role in human health and disease. Digital microscopy allows researchers to locate macromolecules within cells and tissues, thereby better assessing their function in normal and diseased states. The partner universities will offer courses in bioinformatics, technical workshops, and summer research experiences for faculty and undergraduate students. With more firsthand experience at sophisticated biomedical research, undergraduate faculty at many campuses in Arkansas will be able to offer more courses, preparing their students for graduate work in biomedical and biotechnology fields. Stimulating more grant-funded basic research projects through the BRIN will boost the state’s economy. Such projects are important for recruiting top faculty and students to university campuses and for stimulating biomedical research by individual scientists. Thus, they have a “trickle down” effect that is beneficial educationally and economically. New research findings and greater availability of sophisticated research equipment also should be valuable to the poultry, rice, and aquaculture industries. The following scientists will direct the project: Links on This Page Biotechnology Meeting: http://www.uams.edu/today/071901/biotech.htm Original Article: This article originally appeared as a UAMS Today article on September 28, 2001: |
| Powered By Traffic Booster Absolute News Manager Plug-in by Xigla Software | |
This article has been moved here