Gender has complex and poorly understood effects on health throughout the different phases of life. The mechanisms underlying the unique course of several diseases affecting women remain unclear in part because of longstanding impediments to research efforts involving different disciplines. The long-term objective of this application supporting the Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health (BIRCWH) Program at Washington University is to produce independent investigators conducting interdisciplinary research in women's health. The application has a single specific aim: To identify outstanding young scientists committed to women's health who have completed fellowship training, match them with mentors working in an environment that promotes interdisciplinary research, and provide them with career development experiences leading to their independence. During the past 5 years, the Washington University BIRCWH Program has successfully achieved this aim through a combination of a mentored research experience (utilizing a pool of outstanding mentors representing a broad research base encompassing most of the diseases that differentially affect women), didactic training, interaction with scientists from other disciplines pursuing problems in women's health, establishing a visiting scientist program, and formalizing interdisciplinary research links with the substantial number of clinical programs in women's health. The program now proposes to build on this foundation of success by adding a new outpatient mentored clinical experience for all Scholars, refining the didactic portion of the training program, adding two new research areas to our mentor pool to enhance the interdisciplinary nature of the program, and by interfacing with a substantial new institutional commitment to interdisciplinary research. By bridging fellowship training and independent faculty status, the BIRCWH program has the potential to significantly impact women's health by increasing the number of outstanding scientists utilizing novel and cooperative approaches to address problems that include depression, osteoporosis, lupus, type 2 diabetes, urinary tract infections, heart attacks, certain cancers, and infertility.
Musselman, Laura Palanker; Fink, Jill L; Maier, Ezekiel J et al. (2018) Seven-Up Is a Novel Regulator of Insulin Signaling. Genetics 208:1643-1656 |
Colleluori, Georgia; Chen, Rui; Napoli, Nicola et al. (2018) Fat Mass Follows a U-Shaped Distribution Based on Estradiol Levels in Postmenopausal Women. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) 9:315 |
Roe, Catherine M; Babulal, Ganesh M; Head, Denise M et al. (2017) Preclinical Alzheimer's disease and longitudinal driving decline. Alzheimers Dement (N Y) 3:74-82 |
Roe, Catherine M; Barco, Peggy P; Head, Denise M et al. (2017) Amyloid Imaging, Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers Predict Driving Performance Among Cognitively Normal Individuals. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 31:69-72 |
Schindler, Suzanne E; Jasielec, Mateusz S; Weng, Hua et al. (2017) Neuropsychological measures that detect early impairment and decline in preclinical Alzheimer disease. Neurobiol Aging 56:25-32 |
Brookheart, Rita T; Swearingen, Alison R; Collins, Christina A et al. (2017) High-sucrose-induced maternal obesity disrupts ovarian function and decreases fertility in Drosophila melanogaster. Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis 1863:1255-1263 |
Brookheart, Rita T; Duncan, Jennifer G (2016) Drosophila melanogaster: An emerging model of transgenerational effects of maternal obesity. Mol Cell Endocrinol 435:20-28 |
Babulal, Ganesh M; Ghoshal, Nupur; Head, Denise et al. (2016) Mood Changes in Cognitively Normal Older Adults are Linked to Alzheimer Disease Biomarker Levels. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 24:1095-1104 |
Palanker Musselman, Laura; Fink, Jill L; Baranski, Thomas J (2016) CoA protects against the deleterious effects of caloric overload in Drosophila. J Lipid Res 57:380-7 |
Brookheart, Rita T; Duncan, Jennifer G (2016) Modeling dietary influences on offspring metabolic programming in Drosophila melanogaster. Reproduction 152:R79-90 |
Showing the most recent 10 out of 88 publications