Chancellor’s Call for Greater Collaboration Among Researchers Keys Increased Success UNMC Research Grants Total $26.6 Million A Record High for Six-Month Period

Research investigators at the University of Nebraska Medical Center

received $26.6 million in grants during the last six months of  2001

— a 29 percent increase over the same period in 2000. The increase indicates

a new determination within UNMC’s research community to answer Chancellor

Harold M. Maurer’s challenge to pursue more grants — and larger amounts

— as the foundation for UNMC leadership in the health sciences, said David

Crouse, Ph.D., associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and associate

dean for graduate studies and research.

This growth in research grant funding represents a convergence of three

elements, Dr. Crouse said. Our faculty are submitting many more grants,

they are pursuing larger grants, and the growing budget at the National

Institutes of Health creates a larger pool of opportunity for our researchers.

In particular, many of the larger grants are collaborative efforts,

Dr. Crouse said. Faculty members realize that they need to combine forces

to go after these high six-figure and million dollar opportunities. 

Moreover, their success encourages other researchers to emulate their efforts,

and successful researchers are willingly mentoring others to go for it.

Since becoming chancellor in 1998, Dr. Maurer has persistently trumpeted

increased research as the number one priority of his administration and

the key to UNMCs future. He has provided not only the encouragement, but

the infrastructure that gives more faculty members the tools needed to

seek major research opportunities, Dr. Crouse said. In addition, he also

led the drive to earmark many of the states tobacco settlement funds to

the Nebraska Biomedical Research Initiative.  Approximately $4.9 million

was awarded to UNMC for biomedical research in 2001-2002.

Some of the largest grants received are program project grants acquired

by research leaders such as Thomas Rosenquist, Ph.D., vice chancellor for

research, and Irving Zucker, Ph.D., chairman of the department of physiology

and biophysics, and Ercole Cavalieri, D.Sc., professor in the Eppley Research

Institute. Program project grants are typically larger than grants awarded

to individual scientists, as they bring together a group of researchers

who collaborate to study a narrow theme. Due to the large value of program

project grants, they are extremely competitive.  Training grants provide

for additional staffing and instruction of graduate fellows and research

assistants that may be needed. Included in the $26.6 million grant total

are four program grants of $1 million or more and two others for more than

$975,000 each.

One of the grants received during the past six months was a $1.3 million

grant to the College of Medicine for Swanson Hall laboratory renovations.

This grant, received by James Armitage, M.D., dean of the College of Medicine,

will update and better organize the space currently occupied by eight faculty

members of the Center for Neurovirology and Neurodegenerative Disorders. 

The alterations will upgrade several laboratories to improve safety, research

efficiency, program integration and scientific dialogue between investigators.

Dr. Rosenquist received a $988,000 grant to test the way that improper

nutrition, drugs and environmental exposures may interact with selected

genes to induce congenital heart defects. The project seeks improved ways

to predict which women are most likely to deliver babies with heart defects.

We really enjoy the growth of internal mentoring groups such as those

led by senior researchers Dr. Tom Rosenquist, Dr. Howard Gendelman, Dr.

Irving Zucker, Dr. Ercole Cavalieri, and  Dr. Tony Hollingsworth,

for example, Dr. Crouse said.  They not only lead junior staff to

greater science capabilities, but they also make grant writing and pursuit

of funding a critical component of each team members success.

This increase in grant funding mentoring and leadership, combined with

increased faculty willingness to achieve through collaborative strength

what individual researchers previously couldnt achieve alone, are producing

the success envisioned by Chancellor Maurer. He said we could do it and

we are.