September
20, 2005 -- The National Cancer Institute (NCI), part
of the National Institutes of Health, and the National
Science Foundation (NSF) today announced a collaboration
that will establish integrative training environments
for U.S. science and engineering doctoral students
to focus on interdisciplinary nanoscience and technology
research with applications to cancer. Through this
partnership, $12.8 million in grants are being awarded
to four institutions over the next five years.
Nanotechnology, the development and engineering of devices so small that they
are measured on a molecular scale, has significant potential in the prevention,
diagnosis, and treatment of cancer. The application of nanotechnology to cancer
requires cross-disciplinary training in biological and physical sciences, and
at present there are not enough individuals with such training. The NCI's Cancer
Nanotechnology Plan and the NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer identified
the need for such a cross-trained scientific workforce as essential to 21 st
century research and development.
“In recognition of the potential of nanotechnology to overcome challenges in
cancer research, we have undertaken a major commitment to the field through the
NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer. The NCI-NSF collaboration and other
training and education programs are a vital part of that Alliance, enabling us
to build a cadre of appropriately cross-trained investigators without whom we
cannot envision development of a pipeline of new diagnostics and therapeutics,” said
Andrew von Eschenbach, M.D., NCI director.
"These awards represent an exciting new model for collaboration between federal
agencies, that not only makes wise use of budget resources, but also opens new
channels for bringing promising new technologies to bear on an important health
problem that touches nearly all of us," said NSF Deputy Director Kathie L. Olsen,
Ph.D.
Today's awards were granted through NSF's Integrative Graduate Education and
Research Traineeship Program (IGERT). The IGERT program is intended to facilitate
greater diversity in student participation and preparation and contribute to
the development of a diverse, globally-engaged science and engineering workforce.
All of the four selected projects, each of which will support approximately
30 students, are linked to regional cancer centers and the biomedical research
community:
- Integrative Nanoscience and Microsystems, University
of New Mexico, Albuquerque, N.M. This program is
a collaboration between the University of New Mexico's
Center for High Technology Materials within the
School of Engineering, the College of Arts and
Sciences, and the Cancer Research and Treatment
Center. The collective goal is to prepare diverse
graduates with a comprehensive understanding of
multiple scientific disciplines, who can then utilize
nanoscale phenomena to create macroscopic functionality
in three technical emphasis areas: biointerfaces,
information nanotechnology, and complex functional
materials. The principal investigator is Diana
Huffaker, Ph.D.
- NanoPharmaceutical Engineering and Science, Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, N.J. This collaboration
between Rutgers, the New Jersey Institute of Technology,
and the University of Puerto Rico, will prepare
a diverse set of trainees to develop a wide array
of nanoparticle-based biocompatible drug delivery
systems, including DNA-based delivery systems for
brain cancer, and preventive agents. The project
will include training in nanoparticle product and
process design. The program, which will coordinate
with the Cancer Institute of New Jersey, will also
provide training opportunities with pharmaceutical
and biotechnology companies in New Jersey and Puerto
Rico. The principal investigator is Fernando Muzzio,
Ph.D.
- Nanomedical Science and Technology, Northeastern
University, Boston, Mass. This project will establish
a new interdisciplinary doctoral education program
in Nanomedical Science and Technology, with a multidisciplinary
faculty that will work together to develop solutions
to complex problems at the interface of nanotechnology,
biotechnology and medicine. The program aims to
educate the next generation of scientists and technologists
with the requisite skill sets to address the scientific
and engineering challenges of applying nanotechnology
to human health, with the necessary business, ethical
and global perspectives. The project will also
involve investigators from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
and the Massachusetts General Hospital. The principal
investigator is Srinivas Sridhar, Ph.D.
- Building Leadership for the Nanotechnology Workforce
of Tomorrow, University of Washington, Seattle,
Wash. This joint institute for nanotechnology involving
University of Washington, Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory, and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center, will focus on new directions in bionanotechnology.
Such directions include medical applications of
nanoscale platforms; use of nanoscale tools to
understand biological mechanisms underlying disease
and to diagnose and treat disease; and combining
expertise and techniques across physical science,
biomedicine and engineering. The principal investigator
is Marjorie Olmstead, Ph.D.
“This is an unusual and important opportunity,” noted
Larry Sklar, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Pathology,
University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center,
and one of several NCI-funded investigators on the
faculty who will guide the New Mexico project. “This
program formalizes the emerging partnership between
engineering and biomedical research and provides
the pathway for building relationships that will
lead to new discoveries. Our project is all about
building technology platforms, and those platforms
can now be applied to the complex challenges of cancer
biology.”
Along with other NCI training grants being awarded this month, the NCI-NSF
awards address the full spectrum of training and education needs at graduate
school, postdoctoral, and mid-career levels highlighted as priorities in the
NCI's Cancer Nanotechnology Plan. The award program will be jointly overseen
by NSF and NCI through the Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer.
The $144.3 million five-year NCI Alliance for Nanotechnology in Cancer is a
comprehensive, integrated initiative encompassing researchers, clinicians,
and public and private organizations that have joined forces to develop and
translate cancer-related nanotechnology research into clinical practice. The
Alliance was launched in September 2004.
“The IGERT program is a shining example of the integration of education and research
at NSF,” said Deba Dutta, Ph.D., IGERT program director who worked with NCI to
establish this collaboration. “This will provide our science and engineering
doctoral students unique opportunities to participate in nanotechnology innovations
that affect the nation's health. We are excited about this collaboration and
are looking forward to working together with NCI on this important endeavor.”
“We believe that by providing a critical mass of individuals who are prepared
to work in a multi-disciplinary environment, these grants will accelerate the
application of nanotechnology to specific cancer needs, such as the development
of research tools to identify new biological targets, agents to monitor and predict
molecular changes, imaging agents and diagnostics to detect cancer, novel targeting
devices to deliver therapeutic agents, and systems to provide real-time assessments
of therapeutic and surgical efficacy,” noted Leland Hartwell, Ph.D., President
and Director, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
The IGERT program, initiated in 1997 and now comprising approximately 150 projects
nationwide, has been developed to meet the challenges of educating Ph.D. scientists,
engineers, and educators in the U.S. with the interdisciplinary backgrounds,
deep knowledge in chosen disciplines, and technical, professional, and personal
skills to become, in their own careers, the leaders and creative agents for
change. The program is intended to catalyze a cultural change in graduate education,
for students, faculty, and institutions, by establishing innovative new models
for graduate education and training for collaborative research that transcends
traditional disciplinary boundaries. Projects funded through the IGERT program
seek to increase the participation of underrepresented groups, including women
and minorities, in doctorate programs in the engineering, science and mathematics
fields, thereby tapping into a bountiful resource opportunity to advance cancer
research.
For more information on the NCI-NSF partnership,
please visit nano.cancer.gov
For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI Web site at www.cancer.gov or
call NCI's Cancer Information Service at 1-800-4 CANCER (1-800-422-6237)
For more information on the National Science Foundation, please visit www.nsf.gov
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