UNMC lands $5 million grant to collaborate with the University of Puerto Rico on HIV research

The University of Nebraska Medical Center and the University of Puerto

Rico have begun collaboration on HIV research funded by a federal grant.

UNMC was chosen to be a part of the Center for Research and Development

for Minority Institutions from among the top institutions in the country.

Other medical centers participating in the program are Johns Hopkins University,

the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Washington-Seattle.

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke sponsors the

grant, which was awarded to promote mentoring between established and minority

institutions and is worth a total of about $5 million over five years.

Loyda Melendez, M.D., the program’s leader at the University of Puerto

Rico, chose to partner with UNMC because of the university’s track record

in the research’s focus: neurological consequences of HIV infection.

“UNMC is a leader in the field and has an outstanding record for training

inexperienced researchers to become independent scientists with their own

labs and grants,” Dr. Melendez said. “I’m glad to have established this

collaboration. The two universities will benefit from each other greatly.”

The University of Puerto Rico in San Juan has campuses for medical sciences,

nursing, allied health professions, pharmacy and dental studies. In HIV

research at the University of Puerto Rico, most of the testing is done

on Hispanic women a group that isn’t well studied in the United States.

“Certainly Hispanic women have been understudied, although they make

up a growing population of new HIV-infected individuals,” said Howard Gendelman,

M.D., director of the Center for Neurovirology and Neurodegenerative Disorders

at UNMC. “This is a great opportunity to help serve an underserved population

of minority women.”

The program requires collaboration within UNMC as well as with the University

of Puerto Rico. Dr. Gendelman enlisted researchers from a variety of UNMC

departments to participate in the research.

“The beauty of this program is its depth,” Dr. Gendelman said. “It involves

people at UNMC who wouldn’t normally be involved with each other, and people

who don’t usually work on grant-related projects.”

Dr. Gendelman and Jialin Zheng, M.D., both in the Center for Neurovirology

and Neurodegenerative Disorders and the department of pathology and microbiology,

are lead investigators on the study; Jim Anderson, Ph.D., professor and

chairman of the department of preventive and societal medicine, serves

as the study’s statistician; Mike Dierks, in the department of information

technology services, helps with communication between the universities;

and Susan Swindells, M.D., associate professor in the department of internal

medicine, is the project’s clinical liaison with extensive HIV clinical

expertise.

Though Omaha and San Juan are thousands of miles apart, Dierks, an information

specialist, found a way for the universities to communicate that shrinks

the distance at the click of a mouse.

“The two universities will use a new computer program from TeraGlobal

Communications Corp. for weekly videoconferencing,” Dierks said. “With

the program, both parties can see clear video images in real time, hear

each other perfectly and share research data through the same computer

applications.”

UNMC’s cross-disciplinary effort and connection with the University

of Puerto Rico shows UNMC assuming a new role in education, Dr. Gendelman

said.

“UNMC’s participation in this program proves that it cares about helping

minority-led programs develop into world-class institutions,” he said.

“We’re proud to be partnered with such an outstanding institution as the

University of Puerto Rico and look forward to making advances through our

joint research.”