Arkansas Biosciences Institute Awards $1.58 Million in Grants to U of A Researchers
- balalabuark
- Aug 28, 2015
- 3 min read
Aug. 28, 2015
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – The Arkansas Biosciences Institute has awarded University of Arkansas researchers grants for 39 science and technology research projects for fiscal year 2016.
The institute is a partnership of scientists at five research institutions across Arkansas, including the state’s flagship university in Fayetteville, with a focus on supporting biomedical research and agricultural research with medical implications.
The fiscal 2016 grants at the U of A totaled $1.58 million, said Roger Koeppe II, Distinguished Professor of chemistry and biochemistry, who represents the flagship on the institute’s scientific coordinating committee.
Institute-supported investigators explore many different body and cellular processes in their search for answers to challenging basic science- and health-related questions.
Koeppe said the institute chooses projects that are both innovative and may need preliminary results in order to compete for research funding on a national level, from agencies such as the National Institutes of Health or the National Science Foundation.
“For each dollar of Arkansas Biosciences Institute funding, our faculty have been able to generate $3 to $4 of external funding,” Koeppe said. “These grants provide a solid return-on-investment for the University of Arkansas.”
The committee also considers funding for shared equipment, and bridge funding. Multiple researchers may request funding for major instrumentation that they will share, Koeppe said.
This year, Michael Lehmann, an associate professor of biological sciences, was awarded an Arkansas Biosciences grant for $56,257 to study a potential drug target in the fight against obesity. His project is using fruit fly genetics to shed light on how lipin, a protein involved in fat and energy metabolism, is normally regulated and what the consequences are when the protein loses activity.
Since coming to the university in 2002, Lehmann has received more than $1.38 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Arkansas Biosciences Institute.
Susanne Striegler, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry, was awarded an Arkansas Biosciences Institute grant for $50,913 to evaluate the inhibiting effect of chemical compounds she synthesized in her lab on certain enzymes, to develop new tools for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and the early detection of cancer.
Striegler has received nearly $700,000 in funding from the National Science Foundation and Arkansas Biosciences Institute since coming to the university in 2012.
U of A researchers awarded Arkansas Biosciences grants for fiscal 2016:
Paul D. Adams, associate professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Andrew J. Alverson, assistant professor, biological sciences
Tameka Bailey, visiting assistant professor, biological sciences
Kartik Balachandran, assistant professor, biomedical engineering
Bob Beitle, professor, chemical engineering
Jingyi Chen, assistant professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Michael E. Douglas, professor, biological sciences
Tim Evans, assistant professor, biological sciences
Ingrid Fritsch, professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Nicholas Greene, assistant professor, health, human performance and recreation
Bart Hammig, associate professor, health, human performance and recreation
Ralph L. Henry, Distinguished Professor, biological sciences
Joseph Herzog, visiting assistant professor, physics
Christa Hestekin, associate professor, chemical engineering
Jamie A. Hestekin, associate professor, chemical engineering
Colin D. Heyes, associate professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Michael Lehmann, associate professor, biological sciences
Daniel J. Lessner, associate professor, biological sciences
Jeffrey A. Lewis, assistant professor, biological sciences
Jiali Li, associate professor, physics
Matt McIntosh, professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Timothy Muldoon, assistant professor, biological engineering
Ines Pinto, associate professor, biological sciences
Narasimhan Rajaram, assistant professor, biomedical engineering
Joshua Sakon, associate professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Greg Salamo, Distinguished Professor, physics
Woodrow L. Shew, assistant professor, physics
Wei Shi, assistant professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Julie A. Stenken, professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Susanne Striegler, professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Suresh Thallapuranam, professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Christian K. Tipsmark, assistant professor, biological sciences
Feng Wang, associate professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Tyrone A. Washington, assistant professor, health, human performance and recreation
Jeffrey C. Wolchok, assistant professor, biomedical engineering
Charles L. Wilkins, Distinguished Professor, chemistry and biochemistry
David A. Zaharoff, associate professor, biomedical engineering
Nan Zheng, associate professor, chemistry and biochemistry
Min Zou, professor, mechanical engineering
The vision for the Arkansas Biosciences Institute emerged during a statewide planning process for use of the state’s share of the 1998 nationwide tobacco settlement. Health care leaders across the state spoke out in favor of dedicating a portion of the tobacco settlement funds to innovative research that could improve health and help reduce or prevent smoking-related illnesses.
Arkansas voters endorsed the proposed Tobacco Settlement Proceeds Act of 2000, and the Arkansas Legislature enacted the provisions of that proposal as Acts 1569 through 1580 of 2001.
Part of that legislation established the Arkansas Biosciences Institute as a consortium of five research institutions: the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, the University of Arkansas System’s statewide Division of Agriculture, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Arkansas State University and Arkansas Children’s Hospital.
Contacts
Chris Branam, research communications writer/editor
University Relations
479-575-4737, cwbranam@uark.edu

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