In this revised application, funding is requested for the continued support of the NIEHS Center for Environmental Health Sciences (CEHS) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The overall focus of the MIT CEHS is to understand how toxic environmental agents perturb biological systems and to determine how such perturbations may affect human health. Founded in the early 1970's, the CEHS underwent a renewal in leadership in 2001 and is now Directed by Leona Samson and Peter Dedon. As a result of this change in leadership and in response to reviewer criticisms, the Center has been completely reorganized. The current CEHS membership consists of 32 faculty members derived from a total of 8 MIT departments (in the Schools of Science and Engineering), plus three Departments in the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and one in the Harvard Medical School (HMS). The MIT departments are Biology, Chemistry, Biological Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Civil &Environmental Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Nuclear Engineering, Electrical Engineering &Computer Science;the HSPH departments are Epidemiology, Nutrition and Environmental Health. The current Research Cores, each led by an MIT Professor, are (i) the Mutation and Cancer Research Core (led by Peter Dedon);(ii) the Bioengineering for Toxicology Research Core (led by Linda Griffith);and (iii) the Environmental Systems and Health Research Core (led by David Schauer). The current Facilities Cores are (i) the Bioanalytical Core (led by John Wishnok), (ii) the Genomics and Bioinformatics Core (led by Peter Sorger) and (iii) the Animal Models and Pathology Core (led by James Fox). The services available through the three Facilities Cores include sophisticated mass spectrometry, accelerator mass spectrometry, chromatography, transcriptional profiling and computational analysis of such data, transgenic and knock out animal production, pathology services, and state-of the-art microscopy and imaging. Other units include the Administrative Core, the Pilot Project Program and the Community Outreach and Education Program (COEP). The Center also co-sponsors three departmental seminar series, and sponsors a CEHS member seminar series, an annual retreat and several other mechanisms designed to nurture interactions among CEHS members and to promote the activities of the CEHS and an awareness of environmental health science in the MIT community.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
3P30ES002109-30S1
Application #
8081436
Study Section
Environmental Health Sciences Review Committee (EHS)
Program Officer
Reinlib, Leslie J
Project Start
2005-04-15
Project End
2011-03-31
Budget Start
2009-04-01
Budget End
2011-03-31
Support Year
30
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$134,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department
Engineering (All Types)
Type
Schools of Engineering
DUNS #
001425594
City
Cambridge
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02139
Moore, Christopher L; Papa 3rd, Louis J; Shoulders, Matthew D (2018) A Processive Protein Chimera Introduces Mutations across Defined DNA Regions In Vivo. J Am Chem Soc 140:11560-11564
Wang, Xin; Garcia, Carlos T; Gong, Guanyu et al. (2018) Automated Online Solid-Phase Derivatization for Sensitive Quantification of Endogenous S-Nitrosoglutathione and Rapid Capture of Other Low-Molecular-Mass S-Nitrosothiols. Anal Chem 90:1967-1975
Tam, Brooke E; Hao, Yining; Sikes, Hadley D (2018) An examination of critical parameters in hybridization-based epigenotyping using magnetic microparticles. Biotechnol Prog 34:1589-1595
Chan, Cheryl; Pham, Phuong; Dedon, Peter C et al. (2018) Lifestyle modifications: coordinating the tRNA epitranscriptome with codon bias to adapt translation during stress responses. Genome Biol 19:228
Ge, Zhongming; Sheh, Alexander; Feng, Yan et al. (2018) Helicobacter pylori-infected C57BL/6 mice with different gastrointestinal microbiota have contrasting gastric pathology, microbial and host immune responses. Sci Rep 8:8014
Li, Weiwei; Chan, Chi-Kong; Liu, Yushuo et al. (2018) Aristolochic Acids as Persistent Soil Pollutants: Determination of Risk for Human Exposure and Nephropathy from Plant Uptake. J Agric Food Chem 66:11468-11476
Mannion, Anthony; Shen, Zeli; Fox, James G (2018) Comparative genomics analysis to differentiate metabolic and virulence gene potential in gastric versus enterohepatic Helicobacter species. BMC Genomics 19:830
Yuan, Yifeng; Hutinet, Geoffrey; Valera, Jacqueline Gamboa et al. (2018) Identification of the minimal bacterial 2'-deoxy-7-amido-7-deazaguanine synthesis machinery. Mol Microbiol 110:469-483
Rizzo, Alessandro A; Vassel, Faye-Marie; Chatterjee, Nimrat et al. (2018) Rev7 dimerization is important for assembly and function of the Rev1/Pol? translesion synthesis complex. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E8191-E8200
Kulik, Heather J (2018) Large-scale QM/MM free energy simulations of enzyme catalysis reveal the influence of charge transfer. Phys Chem Chem Phys 20:20650-20660

Showing the most recent 10 out of 970 publications