cha-ching
Texas institute grants $12M to bring leading cancer researchers to Houston
Rice University has recruited a prominent Swedish cancer researcher thanks to a $6 million grant from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas.
It’s among $68 million in research grants recently awarded by the state agency, and six recruitment grants totaling $16 million to bring leading cancer researchers to Texas.
A news release from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) describes Pernilla Wittung-Stafshede of the Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden, as “an accomplished and highly gifted biophysical scientist tackling complicated biological questions regarding the role of metals and metal dysregulation in various diseases. She pioneered a new research field around the role of metal ions in the folding and function of metalloproteins.”
Metalloproteins account for nearly half of all proteins in biology, according to the National Institutes of Health. They “catalyze some of the most difficult and yet important functions in [nature], such as photosynthesis and water oxidation,” the federal agency says.
Wittung-Stafshede, a professor of chemical biology and life sciences at Chalmers, is a former professor at Rice.
Aside from the money for Wittung-Stafshede, Houston recruitment grants also went to:
- University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center: $2 million to recruit Rosalie Griffin of the Mayo Clinic
- Baylor College of Medicine: $2 million to recruit Dr. Nipun Verma of the Yale University School of Medicine
- Baylor College of Medicine: $2 million to recruit Xin “Daniel” Gao of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
In Houston, cancer research grants were given to:
- Baylor College of Medicine: $7.8 million
- M.D. Anderson Cancer Center: $20.7 million
- Rice University: $ 1 million
- University of Houston: $1.2 million
- University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston: $4.5 million
“The awards … represent the depth and diversity of CPRIT funding for cancer research in Texas,” says Kristen Doyle, CEO of CPRIT. “These grants develop new approaches to preventing, diagnosing, treating, and surviving cancer for all Texans.”
See the full list of awards here.
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