This renewal application requests support for integrated, broad-based, fundamental, multidisciplinary predoctoral training of first- and second-year students in Neuroscience at the University of Iowa. The application builds on more than three decades of success in matriculating, training, and placing top-caliber PhD students. Our Program features mature leadership (enhanced by the addition of an Associate Director), a sustained 10-year increase in the quality, depth, diversity, and geographic breadth of our applicant pool, and a sharp recent increase in funded neuroscience faculty. The Program draws on a long tradition of collaborations between basic and clinical scientists and a strong translational focus. Institutional support is exceptional. The Training Faculty are 52 experienced, well-funded neuroscientists with research interests that span the gamut of neuroscience, and 20 preceptors are clinician-scientists. Students participate in a carefully honed curriculum that offers broad and fundamental training in levels of analysis and diversity of approaches, with a special focus on the neuroscience of disease and disorders (including a very successful Neurobiology of Disease course). There is intensive training in experimental design, statistical methodology, and quantitative skills and literacy (enhanced by a new required course in Advanced Quantitative Training) and in professional skills development (enhanced by new curricular components in teaching, oral/written communication, networking/skill building, and grantsmanship), and detailed annual evaluation using the Individual Developmental Plan. The Program incorporates three laboratory rotations, regular programmatic activities (Seminar, Research Day, journal clubs), and comprehensive training in responsible conduct of research. The ?value-added? is especially compelling?NIH training grant dollars enhance every aspect of our Program and have contributed directly to sustained successes marked by outstanding time to degree (20-year average of 5.2 years), productivity (5.1 publications per student, 2.9 as first author), completion rate (around 80%), placement of graduates in stellar neuroscience careers (over the past two decades, 51% of our graduates are in tenured or tenure-track academic positions), and diversity accomplishments (some 33% of our current student cohort is diverse; one-third [30/91] of our matriculated students over the past 10 years are diverse; these students have outstanding completion and placement outcomes). To maintain and extend these accomplishments, this renewal request asks for 8 slots per year to support first- and second-year students.

Public Health Relevance

The Iowa Neuroscience Training Program emphasizes a highly interdisciplinary orientation, tied to the Jointly Sponsored NRSA Institutional Predoctoral Training Program in the Neurosciences mission to foster work toward the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of nervous system disorders, and the basic sciences fundamental to this purpose. Our Program remains committed to training a diverse, quantitatively literate, and highly expert workforce of neuroscientists who will assume leadership roles related to the Nation's biomedical and behavioral research agendas.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
2T32NS007421-21
Application #
9702480
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1)
Program Officer
Weigand, Letitia Alexis
Project Start
1999-07-09
Project End
2024-06-30
Budget Start
2019-08-01
Budget End
2020-06-30
Support Year
21
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Iowa
Department
Neurology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
062761671
City
Iowa City
State
IA
Country
United States
Zip Code
52242
Williams, Brittany; Haeseleer, Françoise; Lee, Amy (2018) Splicing of an automodulatory domain in Cav1.4 Ca2+ channels confers distinct regulation by calmodulin. J Gen Physiol 150:1676-1687
Brusich, Douglas J; Spring, Ashlyn M; James, Thomas D et al. (2018) Drosophila CaV2 channels harboring human migraine mutations cause synapse hyperexcitability that can be suppressed by inhibition of a Ca2+ store release pathway. PLoS Genet 14:e1007577
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De Corte, Benjamin J; Della Valle, Rebecca R; Matell, Matthew S (2018) Recalibrating timing behavior via expected covariance between temporal cues. Elife 7:
Reschke-Hernández, Alaine E; Okerstrom, Katrina L; Bowles Edwards, Angela et al. (2017) Sex and stress: Men and women show different cortisol responses to psychological stress induced by the Trier social stress test and the Iowa singing social stress test. J Neurosci Res 95:106-114
Yeates, Catherine J; Zwiefelhofer, Danielle J; Frank, C Andrew (2017) The Maintenance of Synaptic Homeostasis at the Drosophila Neuromuscular Junction Is Reversible and Sensitive to High Temperature. eNeuro 4:
De Corte, Benjamin J; Matell, Matthew S (2016) Interval timing, temporal averaging, and cue integration. Curr Opin Behav Sci 8:60-66
Lee, Amy; Wang, Shiyi; Williams, Brittany et al. (2015) Characterization of Cav1.4 complexes (?11.4, ?2, and ?2?4) in HEK293T cells and in the retina. J Biol Chem 290:1505-21
Whittier, Kelsey L; Boese, Erin A; Gibson-Corley, Katherine N et al. (2013) G-protein coupled receptor expression patterns delineate medulloblastoma subgroups. Acta Neuropathol Commun 1:66

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