The Administrative Core of this Program Project Grant provides the vital support for all programmatic activities, project investigators, and staff. This Core bridges the activities of the Program with the National Institutes of Health, the Medical College of Wisconsin administrative departments, the Department of Physiology, and the investigators of the Program Project Grant. The staff of this Core is responsible for matters of personnel, purchasing, centralization of service contracts, centralization of biostatistical services, and fiscal management. Core A coordinates annual reports to the National Institutes of Health, programmatic travel by Program Investigators, and visits by invited speakers and/or consultants. Core A also coordinates dissemination of vital information within the Program, organizes scientific meetings and seminars related to the Program, and coordinates the activities of the internal and external advisory committees. The Administrative Core has three Specific Aims:
Aim 1 : Facilitate and coordinate the business requirements associated with the Program Project Grant;
Aim 2 : Facilitate and coordinate communication between the PPG Projects and Cores to maximize scientific progress;
and Aim 3 : Provide statistical support to the Project Investigators.
The Administrative Core is a critical component of this PPG and will support the three scientific projects and the two scientific cores. This Core provides the vital administrative support required to coordinate programmatic activities related to personnel, purchasing, biostatistical services, meetings, and fiscal management.
Mattson, David L (2018) Heat stress nephropathy and hyperuricemia. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 315:F757-F758 |
Abais-Battad, Justine M; Lund, Hayley; Fehrenbach, Daniel J et al. (2018) Rag1-null Dahl SS rats reveal that adaptive immune mechanisms exacerbate high protein-induced hypertension and renal injury. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 315:R28-R35 |
Bukowy, John D; Dayton, Alex; Cloutier, Dustin et al. (2018) Do computers dream of electric glomeruli? Kidney Int 94:635 |
Spires, Denisha; Ilatovskaya, Daria V; Levchenko, Vladislav et al. (2018) Protective role of Trpc6 knockout in the progression of diabetic kidney disease. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 315:F1091-F1097 |
Bukowy, John D; Dayton, Alex; Cloutier, Dustin et al. (2018) Region-Based Convolutional Neural Nets for Localization of Glomeruli in Trichrome-Stained Whole Kidney Sections. J Am Soc Nephrol 29:2081-2088 |
Regal, Jean F; Laule, Connor F; McCutcheon, Luke et al. (2018) The complement system in hypertension and renal damage in the Dahl SS rat. Physiol Rep 6:e13655 |
Abais-Battad, Justine M; Lund, Hayley; Fehrenbach, Daniel J et al. (2018) Parental Dietary Protein Source and the Role of CMKLR1 in Determining the Severity of Dahl Salt-Sensitive Hypertension. Hypertension :HYPERTENSIONAHA11811994 |
Williams, Anna Marie; Liu, Yong; Regner, Kevin R et al. (2018) Artificial intelligence, physiological genomics, and precision medicine. Physiol Genomics 50:237-243 |
Palygin, Oleg; Miller, Bradley S; Nishijima, Yoshinori et al. (2018) Endothelin receptor A and p66Shc regulate spontaneous Ca2+ oscillations in smooth muscle cells controlling renal arterial spontaneous motion. FASEB J :fj201800776RR |
Wade, Brittany; Petrova, Galina; Mattson, David L (2018) Role of immune factors in angiotensin II-induced hypertension and renal damage in Dahl salt-sensitive rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 314:R323-R333 |
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