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Columns::September 15, 2003
U. of Tennessee administrator will head Georgia Center
Former administrative information systems director is named interim CIO
Rising numbers: Freshman class is more racially, ethnically diverse
South (Georgia) campus
Study by UGA scientists reveals that laboratory rats under the influence find it hard to concentrate
Study: Property values increase near greenspaces
Campus Closeup
Administrative Changes
Newsmakers
Forum essay: On revising student papers
Rolling out the welcome mat
Campus News
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| Michael Pierce is principal investigator for the grant, which will fund research on technologies to map the glycome of stem cell lines established by Bresagen, a private research company with offices and labs in Athens. (Photo by Peter Frey) |
Cancer bonds
$6.7 million grant will support research that could eventually treat some cancers and Parkinsons disease
By Phil Williams
phil@franklin.uga.edu
The National Center for Research Resources, a component of the National Institutes of Health, has awarded a five-year grant of
$6.7 million to a team headed by scientists at UGA for research that could eventually help in the treatment of certain kinds of cancer and Parkinsons disease.
The grant is co-sponsored by the National Cancer Institute and thereby counts toward the total award dollars needed to apply for an NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center Planning Award. This could be an important step in progress for the Georgia Cancer Coalition, in which UGA is collaborating with the Medical College of Georgia to form the Georgia Cancer Research Center.
This grant demonstrates yet again the quality of our faculty involved in research at the University of Georgia, says President Michael F. Adams. The potential to alleviate human suffering through this work makes it tremendously important.
The large-scale cooperative project will include researchers from UGA, Georgia Tech, the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, Yale University and Bresagen, Inc., as well as scientists from Japan.
We are delighted that our work is increasingly drawing this kind of support, says Michael Pierce, principal investigator for the grant and a faculty member in the Complex Carbohydrate Research Center and the department of biochemistry and molecular biology. It demonstrates the high quality of our faculty and staff at the CCRC and at UGA, as well as those at Georgia Tech.
The National Center for Research Resources supports primary research to create and develop critical resources, models and technologies. NCRR funding also provides biomedical researchers with access to diverse instrumentation, technologies, basic and clinical research facilities, animal models, genetic stocks, biomaterials and more. Such resources facilitate advances in biomedicine that lead to the development of lifesaving drugs, devices and therapies.
The research funded by the grant will focus on technologies to map the glycome of stem cell lines established by Bresagen, a private research company with offices and laboratories in Athens. Glycome describes all the complex carbohydrates attached to proteins and lipids that are made by a cell, as well as the enzymes responsible for their metabolism. It also describes the carbohydrate-binding proteins that function by recognizing these complex carbohydrates.
This proposal was one of only seven funded nationally in this first grant competition, so naturally we are pleased, says Pierce.
This technology will allow the glycomic analysis of small numbers of cells and the means to isolate or kill these particular cells. The expected outcome will be directly applicable to the isolation of certain types of nerve cells for treatment of such diseases as Parkinsons, as well as development of new ways to diagnose and treat cancer.
Others in the research project include Kelley Moremen, Ron Orlando, Parastoo Asadi and Will York of the CCRC; Armit Sheth, John Miller and Krzysztof Kochut of UGAs computer science department and its Large Scale Distributed Information Systems Laboratory; Ian Lyons of Bresagen, Inc. (and an adjunct professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at UGA); and Alfred Merrill of Georgia Tech.
The Georgia Cancer Coalition is a statewide public-private network of people and organizations--doctors, hospitals, government agencies, public health services, survivor and community health groups, universities, industries, nonprofits and interested individuals--working together to save lives and reduce human suffering from cancer.
This grant award underscores Georgias and UGAs determination to fight cancer with the best weapons in our arsenal: university leadership, quality faculty, world-class research, multi-institutional collaborations, public-private partnerships and commitment to being a leader in the war against this killer, says Russ Toal, president of the Georgia Cancer Coalition. We congratulate Dr. Pierce and his colleagues for their good work.
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