Guest guest Posted September 30, 2005 Report Share Posted September 30, 2005 San Francisco Business Times - September 29, 2005 http://sanfrancisco.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2005/09/26/da ily35.html LATEST NEWS San Francisco Business Times - 11:59 AM PDT Thursday Three at Stanford win NIH awards, funding Three of the 13 researchers in the United States who won top National Institutes of Health awards are Stanford University School of Medicine scientists. The awards include up to $500,000 each in annual funding for five years. Stanford said on Thursday it has more Pioneer Award winners this year than any other school or institution. The winners will be announced by the NIH Sept. 29. The Stanford winners are Rando; Pehr Harbury, and Karl Deisseroth. Rando, associate professor of neurology and neurological sciences, is looking for ways to enhance the potential of stem cells to repair damaged tissue in old people. His goal is to figure out how to compensate for the age-related decline in the body's repair capability. His work also has the potential to help sufferers of degenerative diseases such as muscular dystrophy. He said his research team has some data to suggest that it isn't changes in the stem cells that reduces their ability to repair tissue with age, but changes in the environment, or niche, where they reside. This is what he'll use the award money to explore. Harbury, associate professor of biochemistry, was also recently named a 2005 MacArthur Fellow. He is trying to devise ways to use DNA molecules as blueprints for the synthesis of small chemical compounds that may be useful in drug design. He hopes to develop an approach to designing drugs much more quickly and cheaply than is currently possible. Deisseroth, assistant professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, has been focusing on the electrical circuitry of the brain, on the theory that some mental illness may be due to circuitry glitches rather than chemical imbalances. Deisseroth hopes to develop two bioengineering tools using his Pioneer Award money, both using high-speed flashes of light to probe neurons. One would enable him to observe the high-speed circuitry of the brain on the millisecond time scale at which it operates. Silicon Valley / San Business Journal Lynn http://spoilingaunty.tripod.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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