This T35 grant application from the Vanderbilt Student Research and Training Program (SRTP) requests continued support for medical student research training in the areas of diabetes, obesity, digestive diseases, and kidney diseases. The Vanderbilt SRTP provides an opportunity for medical students to conduct intensive, mentored research early in their academic careers (between the first and second years of medical school). By doing so, this program seeks to expose students to career opportunities in biomedical research in diabetes, obesity, digestive diseases, and kidney diseases. Participants in the SRTP are chosen from applicants from US medical schools. The SRTP is affiliated with three Vanderbilt research centers: a NIDDK- supported center grant in diabetes (P30), a NIDDK-supported center grant in digestive disease (P30), and a NIDDK-supported center grant in kidney disease (P30, award pending). These three centers provide the SRTP research base and preceptors for the student?s research experience. The requested number of student positions in the SRTP (32) is based on Vanderbilt resources (number of available research laboratories, lecture size, administrative staff) and our experience with this program. During the summer, the vast majority of the student?s time is spent under the direction of his/her scientific mentor. In addition, student participants are united on a regular basis for a lecture series on current challenges for research and career advice. In addition to training and mentoring of more than 153 medical students from 76 US medical schools in the current funding cycle, the Vanderbilt SRTP has made important contributions to medical student research training more broadly by facilitating and supporting the a national NIDDK-funded summer research program for medical students. As judged by a robust SRTP evaluation program, the students? experiences were meaningful and impactful, led to subsequent research involvement, and influenced the next steps in career decisions.

Public Health Relevance

This T35 grant application from the Vanderbilt Student Research Training Program (SRTP) requests support for medical student research training in the areas of diabetes, obesity, digestive diseases, and kidney disease. The SRTP is affiliated with three NIDDK-supported Vanderbilt Research Centers: the Vanderbilt Diabetes Research and Training Center (VDRTC), the Vanderbilt Digestive Diseases Research Center (VDDRC), and the Vanderbilt O'Brien Kidney Center (VOKC).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
NRSA Short -Term Research Training (T35)
Project #
2T35DK007383-39
Application #
9491024
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDK1)
Program Officer
Castle, Arthur
Project Start
1980-05-01
Project End
2023-04-30
Budget Start
2018-05-01
Budget End
2019-04-30
Support Year
39
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
079917897
City
Nashville
State
TN
Country
United States
Zip Code
37232
Nandyala, Arathi S; Nelson, Lyndsay A; Lagotte, Andrea E et al. (2018) An Analysis of Whether Health Literacy and Numeracy Are Associated with Diabetes Medication Adherence. Health Lit Res Pract 2:e15-e20
Barke, Theresa L; Goldstein, Jeffery A; Sundermann, Alexandra C et al. (2018) Gestational diabetes mellitus is associated with increased CD163 expression and iron storage in the placenta. Am J Reprod Immunol 80:e13020
Hulgan, Todd; Ramsey, Benjamin S; Koethe, John R et al. (2018) Relationships between Adipose Mitochondrial Function, Serum Adiponectin, and Insulin Resistance in Persons with HIV after 96 weeks of Antiretroviral Therapy. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr :
Carboneau, Bethany A; Allan, Jack A; Townsend, Shannon E et al. (2017) Opposing effects of prostaglandin E2 receptors EP3 and EP4 on mouse and human ?-cell survival and proliferation. Mol Metab 6:548-559
Dean, E Danielle; Li, Mingyu; Prasad, Nripesh et al. (2017) Interrupted Glucagon Signaling Reveals Hepatic ? Cell Axis and Role for L-Glutamine in ? Cell Proliferation. Cell Metab 25:1362-1373.e5
Oelsner, Kathryn Tully; Guo, Yan; To, Sophie Bao-Chieu et al. (2017) Maternal BMI as a predictor of methylation of obesity-related genes in saliva samples from preschool-age Hispanic children at-risk for obesity. BMC Genomics 18:57
Mitchell, Sabrina L; Neininger, Abigail C; Bruce, Carleigh N et al. (2017) Mitochondrial Haplogroups Modify the Effect of Diabetes Duration and HbA1c on Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy Risk in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 58:6481-6488
Zhang, Bo; Novitskaya, Tatiana; Wheeler, Debra G et al. (2017) Kcnj11 Ablation Is Associated With Increased Nitro-Oxidative Stress During Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury: Implications for Human Ischemic Cardiomyopathy. Circ Heart Fail 10:
Oelsner, William K; Engstrom, Stephen M; Benvenuti, Michael A et al. (2017) Characterizing the Acute Phase Response in Healthy Patients Following Total Joint Arthroplasty: Predictable and Consistent. J Arthroplasty 32:309-314
Thomas, Joanna L; Pham, Hai; Li, Ying et al. (2017) Hypoxia-inducible factor-1? activation improves renal oxygenation and mitochondrial function in early chronic kidney disease. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 313:F282-F290

Showing the most recent 10 out of 52 publications