Training Grants - Biodefense
This new proposal, Biodefense
Training in Host-Pathogen Interactions, is intended as a seed
project for
rigorous scientific education of graduate students in the study of
pathogenic
microbes, their mechanisms of establishing human or animal infections,
as well
as the discovery of novel therapies or countermeasures that prevent
human
disease. The proposal draws on scientific strengths of University of
Chicago
faculty in the Committees on Microbiology and Immunology as well as on
infrastructure provided through the recently established Great Lakes
Regional
Center of Excellence in Biodefense & Emerging Infectious Diseases,
with
resources in core structures that permit the study of pathogens via
state of
the art microscopy, mass spectrometry, immunology, animal infection and
genomics facilities. Infrastructural commitments at the University of
Chicago
permit work on host-pathogen interactions in BSL-2 and BSL-3
laboratories,
specifically designed for CDC select agents of categories A-C as well
as on the
Ricketts Regional Biocontainment Laboratory at Argonne National
Laboratory, a
federal laboratory that is constructed and operated by the University
of
Chicago for the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
The
commitment of University
of Chicago
faculty
towards research and training excellence in biodefense and
host-pathogen
research is reflected in the recent establishment of the Department of
Microbiology. Expanisve growth with the appointment of seven new
faculty over
the next five years is accompanied by the recent expansion of graduate
training
in Microbiology and by the already excellent achievements of faculty
and
graduate students in this area. Sixteen training faculty study
bacterial
pathogenesis, animal viruses, viral physiology and pathogenesis, plant
pathogenesis, drug resistant microbes, microbial toxins and the immune
response
to infections. Trainees are selected from a pool of 150 applicants with
Bachelor's degree and average GRE and GPA scores of 1375+5 (81%) and
3.3
respectively.The ultimate goals of our training program are ambitious
and aim
at establishing a premier research program in biodefense and
host-pathogen
interactions.
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