Louisiana COBRE
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LSU Veterinary School Receives $11.1 Million Grant

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LSU Veterinary School Receives $11.1 Million Grant

Pictured at the 2004 reception in honor of the original COBRE grant are, from left, Drs. Wiliam Jenkins, Gus Kousoulas, Andrew Lackner, Kevin Carman, and Thomas Klei.

In July 2004, the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine received a $9.9 million grant to establish a Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE). In July 2009, this grant was renewed for more than $11.1 million. This Center grant from the National Center for Research Resources provides substantial funds to developing faculty for independent funding by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) traditional mechanisms. The original grant lasted for five years and was competitively renewed for five more years.

The original grant created a Center for Experimental Infectious Disease Research (CEIDR), which constitutes a strategic alliance between the School of Veterinary Medicine (SVM), the LSU College of Basic Sciences (BASC), and the Tulane National Primate Research Center (TNPRC). Konstantin G. Kousoulas, PhD, professor of veterinary virology and director of the Division of Biotechnology & Molecular Medicine, is the administrator of the COBRE program at the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine. Five assistant professors had research projects in the original grant, representing the Department of Pathobiological Sciences, SVM; the Department of Biological Sciences, BASC; and the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, TNPRC.

The COBRE grant provides funding and research capabilities that give assistant and associate professors the opportunity to establish research programs that will effectively compete for independent funding by NIH. Once a faculty member receives his or her own NIH funding for a particular research program, he or she will be rotated out of COBRE and replaced by other eligible faculty. The overall objective for the COBRE grant renewal is to build upon the substantial accomplishments of the previous funding period and continue efforts toward establishing an independent CEIDR, which relies heavily on the infectious diseases research focus of the LSU SVM, TNPRC and the greater south Louisiana region. Accomplishments by junior investigators JIs) recruited during the last funding period(2003‐2008) includes the award of 5R01, 2R21, 2K22, 1K01 and one NIH‐R01‐subcontract, as well as competitive funding from sources other than NIH. Importantly, SVM and TNPRC were awarded a NIH T32 postdoctoral training grant for veterinarians and a NIH T35 summer training grant for veterinary students. Additional collaborative efforts include shared training in laboratory animal medicine and pathology.

It is envisioned that building existing strengths in infectious disease research and comparative medicine will enable the future formation of a Louisiana‐based Center of Excellence as a fully recognized and self‐sustaining Center supported in part by the participating institutions and the state of Louisiana. The operational plan toward establishing this Center is to continue building a critical nucleus and network of scientists with complementary interests by recruiting and mentoring additional junior investigators and recruiting key senior investigators working in infectious diseases. In addition, the plan calls for the continued development of infrastructure and research capabilities by enhancing and leveraging available research resources. The COBRE will be administered by senior NIH funded investigators, K. Gus Kousoulas, PhD (LSU‐SVM) and Andrew A. Lackner, DVM, PhD (TNPRC). The proposed program for years 6-10 of the COBRE encompass four integrated research projects under the direction of new junior investigators working on infectious diseases. All of the selected junior investigators (JIs) have an exceptional promise to achieve NIH R01 funding within 1‐3 years of the renewed COBRE funding.

Enhancement of the research infrastructure will be achieved by the continued support and enhancement of the Molecular Immunopathology (MIP) Core Laboratory of the SVM Division of Biotechnology and Molecular Medicine (BioMMED), which will operate as a consortium of existing, well‐supported LSU SVM centralized facilities. The MIP Core will provide state‐of‐the art molecular immunopathology research and training capabilities to COBRE‐CEIDR investigators and pathology residents in collaboration with TNPRC. Individual JIs will be mentored by three NIH‐experienced senior mentors who collectively will constitute the internal advisory committee (IAC) of the Center. The COBRE award will enable the LSU SVM, LSU BASC, Louisiana Agricultural Experiment Station (LAES) and TNPRC to further enhance their substantial collaborative efforts on infectious diseases of far‐reaching importance for health and disease and prepare for NIH program grant applications. Importantly, it affords an opportunity to forge alliances in a consortium with other infectious disease scientists in South Louisiana providing an unprecedented opportunity for research and training for all participating units. It is anticipated that research outcomes will be translated to new diagnostics, vaccines and other treatment modalities for ameliorating human and animal infectious diseases.

“What makes this grant so important is that it continues the momentum we began with the funding of the first COBRE that brought in $9.6 million and will allow us to continue the expansion of our research program in infectious disease as it relates to human health and comparative medicine,” said Thomas Klei, PhD, associate dean for research and advanced studies at the School of Veterinary Medicine. “It is important to know that this program was jump-started by funding from the Governor’s Biotechnology Initiative begun many years ago by Governor [Mike] Foster, which continues to have an important impact. It is the only grant like this currently at LSU. The ultimate goal is to create an independent Center for Infectious Diseases relying on the strengths of the participating institutions in the greater south Louisiana region.”

“This large grant is a testament to the underlying strengths and potential of Louisiana in infectious disease research and biotechnology. We hope that state agencies take notice of our successes and assist us in our research and economic development efforts,” said Dr. Kousoulas.

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Dr. Samithamby Jeyaseelan publishes his latest work in "Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research"

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Ethanol Exposure Impairs LPS-Induced Pulmonary LIX Expression: Alveolar Epithelial Cell Dysfunction as a Consequence of Acute Intoxication.
Walker Jr JE, Odden AR, Jeyaseelan S, Zhang P, Bagby GJ, Nelson S, Happel KI. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2008 Nov 25. [Epub ahead of print]
From the Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine (JEW, PZ, SN, KIH), Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana; Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Alcohol Research Center (ARO, PZ, GJB, SN, KIH), New Orleans, Louisiana; School of Veterinary Medicine (SJ), Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana; and Department of Physiology (GJB), Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana.

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A Success Story of a Scientist

As a newly appointed Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathobiological Sciences at Louisiana State University, Samithamby Jeyaseelan (Jey) admits that he would not be where he is now without the support of the NIH-COBRE Center for Experimental Infectious Disease Research (CEIDR) grant administered by the Division of Biotechnology & Molecular Medicine (BIOMMED). The COBRE-CEIDR provided initial support at a crucial time in his career at LSU and was a major attraction for him to come to LSU.

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Grant Writing Seminar

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Dr. K. Gus Kousoulas, Professor and Principal Investigator, gave a seminar titled “A Maverick View of Grantsmanship” on Thursday, October 2, 2008 at noon. The presentation was followed by a panel discussion conducted via the Access Grid, with nine participating sites in Louisiana, to three groups of junior investigators funded by NCRR: the INBRE grant housed at LSU, the LSU-Tulane COBRE Center for Experimental Infectious Disease Research, and the COBRE Mentoring Oral Health Research in Louisiana at the LSUHSC School of Dentistry.

Grantsmanship Presentation

Flyer

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Dr. Samithamby Jeyaseelan Awarded R01 Studying Neutrophil Accumulation in Bacterial Pneumonia

General NewsGrant Number: 1R01HL091958-01
Project Title: Neutrophil Accumulation in Bacterial Pneumonia
PI Information: JEYASEELAN, SAMITHAMBY jey@lsu.edu
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Dr. Andrew MacLean Awarded R01 Studying Focal Adhesion Kinase in disruption of the blood-brain barrier in encephalitis

General NewsGrant Number: 5R01MH077544-02
Project Title: Focal Adhesion Kinase in disruption of the blood-brain barrier in encephalitis
PI Information: MACLEAN, ANDREW G.
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Dr. Stephania Cormier Awarded R01 Studying Combustion Generated PM0.1 and Predisposition to Asthma

General NewsGrant Number: 5R01ES015050-04
Project Title: Combustion Generated PM0.1 and Predisposition to Asthma
PI Information: CORMIER, STEPHANIA A. scorm1@lsuhsc.edu PROFESSOR
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Dr. Cristian Apetrei Awarded R01 Studying Pathogenesis of New SIVsm Lineages in Rhesus Macaques

General NewsGrant Number: 5R01AI065325-03
Project Title: Pathogenesis of New SIVsm Lineages in Rhesus Macaques
PI Information: APETREI, CRISTIAN capetrei@tulane.edu