The Dental Academic Research Training (DART) Program at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry (UAB SOD) is a comprehensive research-training program focused on the development of an innovative, integrated, multi-disciplinary approach to produce a cadre of well-trained, skilled, collaborative scientists and clinician scientists that are capable to address the critical dental, oral and craniofacial research issues of our nation. This renewal is a continuation of our NIDCR T-90 (DE022736) /R90 (DE023056) DART Training Program that was built on our prior T-32 DART Program (DE017607-05). Furthermore, our training experience is the culmination of prior successful NIDCR T32 Research Training programs: Post-doctoral Training in Oral Health (T32-DE14300); Post-Doctoral Training in Caries Research (T32-DE007026); and a Short-Term Research Training for Health Professional Students (T35-DK07545; funded for over forty years). This robust experience has led to a successful innovative program designed to enhance the knowledge of dentists, graduate students, dual degree (DMD/PhD) students, and postdoctoral fellows in basic and clinical research providing a pathway to productive, independent dental academic careers with unique acquired skill sets in grantsmanship and leadership. The DART Program offers four training tracks: Track I- DMD/Ph.D; Track II- Pre-doctoral Ph.D.; Track III- Post-doctoral training for foreign trained dentists; and Track IV- Post-doctoral training. Integrative DART core experiences include: 1) Presentation skills; 2) Research knowledge; 3) Leadership and Networking development; 4) Responsible Conduct of Research training; 5) Grant Writing skills; and 6) Individualized Development Plans. The primary objective of the DART is to provide a broadened interdisciplinary research experience for exceptionally motivated trainees in a research-intensive collaborative academic university environment. Research training is provided in one of the SOD?s four programmatic research themes: 1) Infection/ Host Response; 2) Craniofacial Development /Genetics; 3) Biomaterial Science/ Biomimetics; and 4) Implementation Science/ Clinical Outcomes Research. The UAB SOD is uniquely position to provide training for the next generation of academicians since we are ranked #1 in NIDCR research funding (since 2012) and host the NIDCR National Dental Practice Based Research Network (U19-DE022736). The SOD is an integral component of a major southeast regional health science center with a ?Highest Research Activity? Carnegie Classification.

Public Health Relevance

Our nation is faced with a growing shortage of highly qualified, well-trained clinician scientists and scientists to address the expanding dental, oral and craniofacial health needs of our diverse population. The Dental Academic Research Training (DART) Program is a comprehensive research-training program focused on an innovative, integrated, multi-disciplinary approach to produce a cadre of well-trained, skilled, collaborative scientists and clinician scientists that are capable to address the critical dental, oral and craniofacial research issues of our nation. The program is housed in the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry, ranked #1 in NIDCR funding (dental school and institution), which is an integral component of a vital major health science center with a ?Highest Research Activity? Carnegie Classification located in the southeast region of our nation. PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 06/09) Page Continuation Format Page

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research (NIDCR)
Type
Interdisciplinary Research Training Award (T90)
Project #
5T90DE022736-07
Application #
9520281
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDE1)
Program Officer
King, Lynn M
Project Start
2012-07-01
Project End
2022-06-30
Budget Start
2018-07-01
Budget End
2019-06-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Alabama Birmingham
Department
Dentistry
Type
Schools of Dentistry/Oral Hygn
DUNS #
063690705
City
Birmingham
State
AL
Country
United States
Zip Code
35294
Bae, Ji-Myung; Clarke, John C; Rashid, Harunur et al. (2018) Specificity Protein 7 Is Required for Proliferation and Differentiation of Ameloblasts and Odontoblasts. J Bone Miner Res 33:1126-1140
Momeni, Stephanie S; Whiddon, Jennifer; Moser, Stephen A et al. (2018) Transmission patterns of Streptococcus mutans demonstrated by a combined rep-PCR and MLST approach. Clin Oral Investig 22:2847-2858
Greene, Stephen L; Kau, Chung How; Sittitavornwong, Somsak et al. (2018) Surgical Management and Evaluation of the Craniofacial Growth and Morphology in Cleidocranial Dysplasia. J Craniofac Surg 29:959-965
Mieher, Joshua L; Larson, Matthew R; Schormann, Norbert et al. (2018) Glucan Binding Protein C of Streptococcus mutans Mediates both Sucrose-Independent and Sucrose-Dependent Adherence. Infect Immun 86:
Chavez, R D; Coricor, G; Perez, J et al. (2017) SOX9 protein is stabilized by TGF-? and regulates PAPSS2 mRNA expression in chondrocytes. Osteoarthritis Cartilage 25:332-340
Rashid, Harunur; Chen, Haiyan; Hassan, Quamarul et al. (2017) Dwarfism in homozygous Agc1CreERT mice is associated with decreased expression of aggrecan. Genesis 55:
Garcia, S S; Blackledge, M S; Michalek, S et al. (2017) Targeting of Streptococcus mutans Biofilms by a Novel Small Molecule Prevents Dental Caries and Preserves the Oral Microbiome. J Dent Res 96:807-814
Childers, Noel K; Momeni, Stephanie S; Whiddon, Jennifer et al. (2017) Association Between Early Childhood Caries and Colonization withStreptococcus mutansGenotypes From Mothers. Pediatr Dent 39:130-135
Peters, Sarah B; Wang, Ying; Serra, Rosa (2017) Tgfbr2 is required in osterix expressing cells for postnatal skeletal development. Bone 97:54-64
Khass, Mohamed; Schelonka, Robert L; Liu, Cun Ren et al. (2017) Alterations in B cell development, CDR-H3 repertoire and dsDNA-binding antibody production among C57BL/6 ?D-iD mice congenic for the lupus susceptibility loci sle1, sle2 or sle3. Autoimmunity 50:42-51

Showing the most recent 10 out of 32 publications