This is an application for continued support of an Institutional Training Grant in CNS Plasticity and Recovery of Function after CNS Injury. The request is for support of four predoctoral and four postdoctoral trainees, and one short term (i.e. 3 month) fellow. The long-range goal of this training program is to prepare scientists and physicians who will be in a position to define the mechanisms underlying recovery of function following central nervous system injury and to identify and implement methods to enhance that recovery. This application brings together basic scientists and clinician scientists at two institutions in Washington, D.C. (Georgetown University and the National Rehabilitation Hospital). The predoctoral trainees will receive their Ph.D. from the Interdisciplinary Program in Neurosciences at Georgetown (a broad-based, non-departmental graduate program leading to a Ph.D. in Neuroscience). A comprehensive training program aimed at recovery of function after CNS injury has been developed for pre- and postdoctoral training. The Program Director and Training Faculty are long-time mentors and researchers and the Program Director has both clinical and basic science experience in recovery of function after CNS injury. The training environment fosters collaborative, multidisciplinary research efforts of both faculty and trainees. Many of the faculty have previous and ongoing collaborations; students are encouraged to seek co-mentorship between faculty with complementary research interests. In addition to formal coursework and laboratory research rotation, pre- and postdoctoral trainees participate in an ongoing seminar series, joint Neurology, Neurosurgery, Neuroscience grand rounds, national professional meetings, a journal club with special emphasis on CNS plasticity, regeneration and recovery of function, intensive laboratory research and training in writing and reviewing manuscripts, grantsmanship, and are provided mentored teaching opportunities in the Medical Neuroscience course. Trainees are also given many opportunities to interact with visiting scientists and to present their research at local and national meetings. An experienced and well-funded group of 21 faculty from 8 different departments with strong training records, a wide range of research interests and expertise relevant to plasticity and recovery of function after CNS injury will participate in training. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32HD007459-15
Application #
7425907
Study Section
Pediatrics Subcommittee (CHHD)
Program Officer
Nitkin, Ralph M
Project Start
1994-07-01
Project End
2010-04-30
Budget Start
2008-05-01
Budget End
2010-04-30
Support Year
15
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$401,291
Indirect Cost
Name
Georgetown University
Department
Neurosciences
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
049515844
City
Washington
State
DC
Country
United States
Zip Code
20057
Neckel, Nathan D (2017) Novel spatiotemporal analysis of gait changes in body weight supported treadmill trained rats following cervical spinal cord injury. J Neuroeng Rehabil 14:96
Neckel, Nathan D; Dai, Haining; Rodriguez, Olga C (2017) Addition of forelimb training reduces gains from robotic gait training in a rat model of spinal cord injury. IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot 2017:346-351
Neckel, Nathan D (2015) Methods to quantify the velocity dependence of common gait measurements from automated rodent gait analysis devices. J Neurosci Methods 253:244-53
Neckel, Nathan D; Dai, Haining; Bregman, Barbara S (2013) Quantifying changes following spinal cord injury with velocity dependent locomotor measures. J Neurosci Methods 214:27-36
DesJardin, Jacqueline T; Holmes, Angela L; Forcelli, Patrick A et al. (2013) Defense-like behaviors evoked by pharmacological disinhibition of the superior colliculus in the primate. J Neurosci 33:150-5
Corbin, Joshua G; Haydar, Tarik F (2007) Quantum dots for neuroscience research: new tools for old problems? Nanomedicine (Lond) 2:579-81
Slotkin, Jonathan R; Chakrabarti, Lina; Dai, Hai Ning et al. (2007) In vivo quantum dot labeling of mammalian stem and progenitor cells. Dev Dyn 236:3393-401
Carney, Rosalind S E; Alfonso, Teresa B; Cohen, Daniela et al. (2006) Cell migration along the lateral cortical stream to the developing basal telencephalic limbic system. J Neurosci 26:11562-74
Lynskey, James V; Sandhu, Faheem A; Sandhu, Faheen A et al. (2006) Delayed intervention with transplants and neurotrophic factors supports recovery of forelimb function after cervical spinal cord injury in adult rats. J Neurotrauma 23:617-34
Bundesen, Liza Q; Scheel, Tracy Aber; Bregman, Barbara S et al. (2003) Ephrin-B2 and EphB2 regulation of astrocyte-meningeal fibroblast interactions in response to spinal cord lesions in adult rats. J Neurosci 23:7789-800

Showing the most recent 10 out of 25 publications