The goal for the MSU-BRIN is to increase biomedical research capacity and enhance research opportunities for faculty, graduate students, and undergraduates in Montana by developing a network of doctoral and four-year universities, as well as tribally-controlled community colleges. To this end, the MSU-BRIN will develop a TMC that will expand research, mentoring, and collaborative opportunities for faculty and students; a BC that will deliver training in advanced bioinformatics tools and improve electronic communication among partner institutions, a CFC that will address the need for a bioinformatics facility to serve all campuses and participants in the network, and an AC to coordinate network activities, communication, outreach, and project assessment. MSU, a Ph.D.-granting institution, will serve as the network lead institution. Partner institutions are MSU-Billings (MSUB), MSUN), the McLaughlin Research Institute (MRI) for Biomedical Sciences, and six tribal colleges: Blackfeet Community College (BCC), Dull Knife Memorial College (DKMC), Little Big Horn College (LBHC), Fort Belknap Community College (FBCC), Fort Peck Community College (FPCC), and Stone Child Community College (SCCC).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Exploratory Grants (P20)
Project #
5P20RR016455-02
Application #
6530152
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1-RI-5 (01))
Program Officer
Gorospe, Rafael
Project Start
2001-09-25
Project End
2004-08-31
Budget Start
2002-09-01
Budget End
2003-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$1,999,986
Indirect Cost
Name
Montana State University Bozeman
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
City
Bozeman
State
MT
Country
United States
Zip Code
59717
Doyle, John T; Kindness, Larry; Realbird, James et al. (2018) Challenges and Opportunities for Tribal Waters: Addressing Disparities in Safe Public Drinking Water on the Crow Reservation in Montana, USA. Int J Environ Res Public Health 15:
Eggers, Margaret J; Doyle, John T; Lefthand, Myra J et al. (2018) Community Engaged Cumulative Risk Assessment of Exposure to Inorganic Well Water Contaminants, Crow Reservation, Montana. Int J Environ Res Public Health 15:
Richards, Crystal L; Broadaway, Susan C; Eggers, Margaret J et al. (2018) Detection of Pathogenic and Non-pathogenic Bacteria in Drinking Water and Associated Biofilms on the Crow Reservation, Montana, USA. Microb Ecol 76:52-63
Douglass, Richard J; Vadell, MarĂ­a Victoria (2016) How much effort is required to accurately describe the complex ecology of a rodent-borne viral disease? Ecosphere 7:
Logsdon, Aric F; Lucke-Wold, Brandon P; Nguyen, Linda et al. (2016) Salubrinal reduces oxidative stress, neuroinflammation and impulsive-like behavior in a rodent model of traumatic brain injury. Brain Res 1643:140-51
Carver, Scott; Mills, James N; Parmenter, Cheryl A et al. (2015) Toward a Mechanistic Understanding of Environmentally Forced Zoonotic Disease Emergence: Sin Nombre Hantavirus. Bioscience 65:651-666
Larsson, Laura S (2015) The Montana Radon Study: social marketing via digital signage technology for reaching families in the waiting room. Am J Public Health 105:779-85
Larsson, Laura S; Champine, Dorothy; Hoyt, Dee et al. (2015) Social Marketing Risk-Framing Approaches for Dental Sealants in Rural American Indian Children. Public Health Nurs 32:662-70
Stierle, Andrea A; Stierle, Donald B; Girtsman, Teri et al. (2015) Azaphilones from an Acid Mine Extremophile Strain of a Pleurostomophora sp. J Nat Prod 78:2917-23
Drecktrah, Dan; Lybecker, Meghan; Popitsch, Niko et al. (2015) The Borrelia burgdorferi RelA/SpoT Homolog and Stringent Response Regulate Survival in the Tick Vector and Global Gene Expression during Starvation. PLoS Pathog 11:e1005160

Showing the most recent 10 out of 165 publications