Hunter College proposes to continue, expand and improve its 22 year old MBRS-supported student training program (1981 - present) which has produced approximately 42 PhDs (34 are in progress) from students who are underrepresented in science. Three developmental activities are included: an Undergraduate Student Training Program, a Graduate Student Program, and Summer Research Programs for undergraduate students. At both the undergraduate and graduate level, students who are underrepresented in science receive an intensive research experience in a laboratory engaged in nationally funded, competitive, state of the art, biomedical science research. At the undergraduate level it also involves intensive mentoring by a faculty member and other enrichment activities intended to enhance science performance and to inspire and motivate students to seek advanced degrees in science (PhD) and a research career. At the graduate level, it also provides an environment which promotes the achievement of a PhD and future science careers. Summer programs provide the opportunity for research: non-Hunter College undergraduates will come to Hunter College and Hunter College MBRS (RISE) and MARC undergraduates have the opportunity to go to The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University. ? ? The MBRS-RISE goals of the program are to increase the number underrepresented minorities entering biomedical research careers and to enhance science learning at Hunter College. A number of specific objectives are detailed in the evaluation plan. The most important include increasing entrance into PhD programs by RISE undergraduates to 50% of participants (an increase of approximately 2 students/yr) and increasing the number of PhDs/year in the graduate program by 100% (from 1/yr to 2/yr). In both programs, the population of students will be widened and diversified. Promising, but not high achieving, students will be accepted and provided assistance to progress to PhD degrees. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Education Projects (R25)
Project #
5R25GM060665-08
Application #
7195813
Study Section
Minority Programs Review Committee (MPRC)
Program Officer
Rivera-Rentas, Alberto L
Project Start
2000-03-01
Project End
2008-02-29
Budget Start
2007-03-01
Budget End
2008-02-29
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$965,943
Indirect Cost
Name
Hunter College
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
620127915
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10065
Avila, Jorge A; Zanca, Roseanna M; Shor, Denis et al. (2018) Chronic voluntary oral methamphetamine induces deficits in spatial learning and hippocampal protein kinase Mzeta with enhanced astrogliosis and cyclooxygenase-2 levels. Heliyon 4:e00509
Corwin, Chuhyon; Nikolopoulou, Anastasia; Pan, Allen L et al. (2018) Prostaglandin D2/J2 signaling pathway in a rat model of neuroinflammation displaying progressive parkinsonian-like pathology: potential novel therapeutic targets. J Neuroinflammation 15:272
Di, Lia; Wan, Zhenmao; Akther, Saymon et al. (2018) Genotyping and Quantifying Lyme Pathogen Strains by Deep Sequencing of the Outer Surface Protein C (ospC) Locus. J Clin Microbiol 56:
Farley, Christopher; Aggarwal, Amit; Singh, Sunaina et al. (2018) A Structural Model of Nitro-Porphyrin Dyes Based on Spectroscopy and Density Functional Theory. J Comput Chem 39:1129-1142
Luine, Victoria; Serrano, Peter; Frankfurt, Maya (2018) Rapid effects on memory consolidation and spine morphology by estradiol in female and male rodents. Horm Behav :
Hernández, Yözen; Bernstein, Rocky; Pagan, Pedro et al. (2018) BpWrapper: BioPerl-based sequence and tree utilities for rapid prototyping of bioinformatics pipelines. BMC Bioinformatics 19:76
Jean-Louis, Teneka; Rockwell, Patricia; Figueiredo-Pereira, Maria E (2018) Prostaglandin J2 promotes O-GlcNAcylation raising APP processing by ?- and ?-secretases: relevance to Alzheimer's disease. Neurobiol Aging 62:130-145
Fonseca, Danae; Baquero, Jorge; Murphy, Michael R et al. (2018) mRNA Processing Factor CstF-50 and Ubiquitin Escort Factor p97 Are BRCA1/BARD1 Cofactors Involved in Chromatin Remodeling during the DNA Damage Response. Mol Cell Biol 38:
Valderrama, Jorge; Miranda, Regina (2017) Early life stress predicts negative urgency through brooding, depending on 5-HTTLPR genotype: A pilot study with 6-month follow-up examining suicide ideation. Psychiatry Res 258:481-487
Avila, Jorge A; Alliger, Amber A; Carvajal, Brigett et al. (2017) Estradiol rapidly increases GluA2-mushroom spines and decreases GluA2-filopodia spines in hippocampus CA1. Hippocampus 27:1224-1229

Showing the most recent 10 out of 85 publications