Situated in the heart of Detroit, the Wayne State University """"""""Center for Urban Responses to Environmental Stressors"""""""" (CURES) is focused on understanding how exposures to stressors that are prevalent in the urban industrialized environment, both chemical and non-chemical, impact human health. Special emphasis is placed on life windows of heightened susceptibility to environmental exposure and vulnerable persons at risk for environmental disease (e.g., children and adults of low socio-economic status, older adults, immigrants, refugees, and first responders). The hypothesis of the CURES Center is that diseases that compromise the quality of life in an industrialized urban environment, such as Detroit, occur as a consequence of dynamic interactions among an individual's genetic and epigenetic make-up, nutritional status, and environmental stressors, which include chronic low-level toxicant exposures as well as psycho-social and physical stressors, that re-program key cellular regulatory networks to favor pathogenesis. Four disease-oriented research interest groups serve as interdisciplinary hubs for population and basic scientists and community members interested in the role of environmental exposure in 1) immune disorders, 2) metabolic disease, 3) cancer, and 4) mental health disturbances. The Transdisciplinary/Translational Integration team (TRANSIT) works with community advisors to apply an integrated transdisciplinary approach to solving environmental health problems. The Integrative Health Sciences Facility Core guides Center researchers transitioning toward translational research studies and provides stem cell and human biospecimen services. The Exposure Signatures Facility Core enables Center members to apply integrated, state-of-the-art genomic, epigenomic, proteomic, and bioinformatic strategies to environmental health science research. The Community Outreach and Engagement Core provides for bi-directional exchange between the urban community at risk for environmental illness and Center members. CURES also sponsors programs focused on career and new project development. The CURES Center is a dynamic transdisciplinary research team that is dedicated to environmental disease prevention and creating a cleaner and healthier living and working environment in the city of Detroit.

Public Health Relevance

The Wayne State University (WSU) Center for Urban Responses to Environmental Stressors (CURES) is focused on establishing a cleaner and healthier living and working environment in the city of Detroit. The CURES Center applies an integrated team approach to understand how exposure to urban environmental chemical and non-chemical stressors affects human health. INSTITUTIONAL COMMITMENT AND ORGANIZATION

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
1P30ES020957-01A1
Application #
8619364
Study Section
Environmental Health Sciences Review Committee (EHS)
Program Officer
Thompson, Claudia L
Project Start
2014-06-05
Project End
2017-03-31
Budget Start
2014-06-05
Budget End
2015-03-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2014
Total Cost
$711,998
Indirect Cost
$243,578
Name
Wayne State University
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
001962224
City
Detroit
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48202
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