Innovative projects and recruiting lead UNMC to expanded grant funding

When the University of Nebraska Medical Center broke its record for

total research grants in a single quarter by bringing in $26 million during

July, August and September, it was a tribute to the universitys rise in

innovative research projects and its ability to recruit top investigators.

UNMC is fortunate that so many investigators are engaging in innovative

research, said Thomas Rosenquist, Ph.D., UNMC vice chancellor for research.

It is also important that the university has been able to hire so many

of the best and brightest researchers in the country. During this first

quarter, we had 40 research projects funded for $100,000 or more.

David Bylund, Ph.D., UNMC professor of pharmacology, received a three-year,

$497,000 grant funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

to develop laboratory animal models for testing antidepressants designed

for children and adolescents.

There are no established juvenile rodent animal models of clinical

depression, Dr. Bylund said. We have reasonable rodent animal models

for adults that predict more than 90 percent of how well drugs work in

adult humans, but no one to this point has looked at models in the young

animal to see what drugs might be effective in children and adolescents.

An important difference between clinical depression in children and adolescents,

as compared to adults, is the response to anti-depressant drugs.

One of UNMCs newest researchers is Christine Eischen, Ph.D., assistant

professor, Eppley Cancer Institute. She received a grant for $1.47 million

over five years from the National Institutes of Health.

The focus of my research is to identify and characterize specific genes

that regulate lymphoma development, Dr. Eischen said. We utilize mouse

models that mimic important aspects of human lymphoma and biochemical and

molecular approaches to evaluate genes of interest.  Determining the

function of the identified genes in a living organism is critical to understand

the physiological role that specific genes have in normal cell growth and

survival and how these genes are then altered in cancer.

The goal of our research is to increase understanding of how lymphoma

develops, which should lead to improved therapeutics for the treatment

of lymphoma.

 On the other hand, Irving Zucker, Ph.D, Theodore F. Hubbard Professor

of Cardiovascular Research and chairman, department of physiology and biophysics,

is one of the universitys most senior researchers.

He received nearly $2 million to study chronic heart failure.

Heart failure is a disorder that is growing in epidemic proportions

in the United States, Dr. Zucker said. This is due, in part, to an aging

population and to medicine’s ability to enhance survival from acute events

such as heart attacks and rhythm disturbances. Our project is designed

to study the relationships between the nervous system and the circulatory

system in animal models of chronic heart failure. Because the nervous system

is responsible for changes in heart rate and in the force of the contraction

of the heart and blood vessels, over activity of this portion of the nervous

system contributes to a worsening of the heart failure state.

Our studies will elucidate the cellular and molecular mechanisms that

contribute to the increased nervous activity. We will investigate these

mechanisms in the brain and in the peripheral circulation. Finally, we

will determine the role of exercise training on alterations in these mechanisms

and on the changes in heart function that exercise training effects in

our models of heart failure. These studies will lead to an enhanced understanding

of the mechanisms responsible for the continual deterioration of the cardiovascular

system in chronic heart failure patients.

Keith Mueller, Ph.D., professor, department of preventive and society

medicine, received $1.2 million to establish a center for rural health

policy.

The RUPRI (Rural Policy Research Institute) Center for Rural Health

Policy Analysis conducts several small scale studies designed to help shape

public policy, Dr. Mueller said.

Projects funded for the current year include:  examining reasons

for increases in health care costs in rural areas; developing a methodology

for selecting rural communities to participate in a special project to

monitor changes in health care delivery and other services in those communities;

simulating the effects of changes in Medicare payment on physician practice

revenues; and assessing the development of Medicare preferred provider

organizations in rural areas.

The center performed an analysis of the differences in Medicare payments

to physicians in rural areas compared to physicians in urban areas, and

the data was helpful in determining an acceptable payment for physicians

and included in the Medicare prescription drug legislation. The center

also performed an analysis of health insurance plans participating in the

Federal Employment Health Benefits Plan.