The U. Chicago Medical Scientist Training Program submits this renewal application to the National Institutes of Health to continue and expand into the next century its training of outstanding leaders in the biomedical field. We request funding for 48 MSTP positions, an increase of 4 from the currently recommended slots (44 recommended/36 funded). At the requested level of support, NIH funding will cover approximately 25% of the program's costs, the rest being provided by institutional resources. We plan to recruit matriculating classes of 12 students who are expected to graduate in 8 years. The Medical Scientist Training Program at the U. Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine has been in existence for 37 years with uninterrupted funding and a superb training record of academic physicians in leadership positions (including directorships of MSTPs at UCSF and Harvard). It has graduated 193 students who have published over 1500 papers. Currently 68 individuals are enrolled in the program including 6% URM and 30% women. In the last five years, 34 students graduated from the Program and 38 students entered it. Continuing in the tradition of its graduates, our current MSTP students have published extensively in top journals such as Nature, Science, Cell, Immunity, Journal of Biological Chemistry, and others. In this proposal we provide compelling and detailed evidence on the superb quality of our students and the rigorous training environment at Chicago which is uniquely configured to support interdisciplinary programs such as the MSTP. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32GM007281-34
Application #
7449695
Study Section
National Institute of General Medical Sciences Initial Review Group (BRT)
Program Officer
Shapiro, Bert I
Project Start
1975-07-01
Project End
2010-06-30
Budget Start
2008-07-01
Budget End
2009-06-30
Support Year
34
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$1,838,678
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Chicago
Department
Pathology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005421136
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60637
Hutchison, Alan L; Allada, Ravi; Dinner, Aaron R (2018) Bootstrapping and Empirical Bayes Methods Improve Rhythm Detection in Sparsely Sampled Data. J Biol Rhythms 33:339-349
Bollong, Michael J; Lee, Gihoon; Coukos, John S et al. (2018) A metabolite-derived protein modification integrates glycolysis with KEAP1-NRF2 signalling. Nature 562:600-604
Wen, Frank T; Bell, Sidney M; Bedford, Trevor et al. (2018) Estimating Vaccine-Driven Selection in Seasonal Influenza. Viruses 10:
Karki, Sophiya; Kennedy, Domenick E; Mclean, Kaitlin et al. (2018) Regulated Capture of V? Gene Topologically Associating Domains by Transcription Factories. Cell Rep 24:2443-2456
Zhou, Katherine I; Clark, Wesley C; Pan, David W et al. (2018) Pseudouridines have context-dependent mutation and stop rates in high-throughput sequencing. RNA Biol 15:892-900
Mowers, Erin E; Sharifi, Marina N; Macleod, Kay F (2018) Functions of autophagy in the tumor microenvironment and cancer metastasis. FEBS J 285:1751-1766
Uddin, Sophia; Heald, Shannon L M; Van Hedger, Stephen C et al. (2018) Hearing sounds as words: Neural responses to environmental sounds in the context of fluent speech. Brain Lang 179:51-61
Delhaye, Benoit P; Long, Katie H; Bensmaia, Sliman J (2018) Neural Basis of Touch and Proprioception in Primate Cortex. Compr Physiol 8:1575-1602
Schnorenberg, Mathew R; Yoo, Sang Pil; Tirrell, Matthew V et al. (2018) Synthesis and Purification of Homogeneous Lipid-Based Peptide Nanocarriers by Overcoming Phospholipid Ester Hydrolysis. ACS Omega 3:14144-14150
Webber, Jemma L; Zhang, Jie; Massey, Alex et al. (2018) Collaborative repressive action of the antagonistic ETS transcription factors Pointed and Yan fine-tunes gene expression to confer robustness in Drosophila. Development 145:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 406 publications