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Graduate Student Dana Walsh featured

March 15, 2016
Graduate Student Dana Walsh featured in the ºÚÁÏÍø's Vital Signs publication.

Dr. Carmen Williams is NIEHS Mentor of the Year

December 4, 2015
Dr Carmen WIlliams and Alisa Suen At the 2015 NIEHS Science Festival, Dr. Carmen Williams was awarded NIEHS Mentor of the Year to recognize her dedication to mentoring. Dr. Williams’ past and present trainees describe her as being consistently available and truly making mentoring a priority. She tailors her style...

Three CiT students are selected for oral presentation at the Gordon Research Seminar on Cellular and molecular Mechanisms of Toxicity

September 24, 2015
Speakers were just selected for the upcoming specialized and selective Gordon Research Seminar on Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Toxicity in Andover, New Hampshire. Of the eleven speakers selected from institutions around the world for this prestigious honor, three are ºÚÁÏÍø Curriculum in Toxicology graduate students. Phillip Wages (Samet lab)...

Dr. Fry selected as the new Director of the ºÚÁÏÍø Superfund Research Program

September 2, 2015
Rebecca Fry, PhD, associate professor of environmental sciences and engineering at the Gillings School, has been named director of the ºÚÁÏÍø Superfund Research Program. The program brings together a diverse group of scientists, engineers, science communicators and trainees to study human health and environmental risks associated with exposure to toxic...

Excellent representation of the Curriculum in Toxicology at the Gordon Research Conference on Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Toxicity in Andover, NH

August 20, 2015
The Gordon Research Conference/Seminar in Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Toxicity took place in Andover, NH on August 9-14th, 2015 (https://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?id=14898). This conference showcased state-of-the-art mechanistic toxicological research. Topics included areas such as emerging technologies in basic, mechanistic, systems biology, epigenetics, the microbiome, and stem cells as well as computational,...

Leah Norona conducted an internship at OrganovoTM to learn more about 3D human tissue bio-printing technology

May 19, 2015
Leah Norona, graduate student in the lab of Dr. Ed LeCluyse at the Hamner Institutes is receiving support from OrganovoTM (ONVO) to pursue her doctoral dissertation aimed at understanding the mode of action underlying fibrogenic chemicals. Leah submitted a proposal outlining the utility of ONVO’s model system with which to...

Alisa Suen is awarded the 2015 Anita Payne Scholarship for attending the Frontiers in Reproduction (FIR) course at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts

March 13, 2015
Alisa Suen, graduate student in the lab of Dr Carmen Williams, is the 2015 recipient of the Anita Payne Scholarship. This award was established in 2012 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction (SSR) to help support the cost of travel and participation in the Frontiers in Reproduction (FIR)...

Dr Folami Ideraabdullah receives K22 from NIEHS to study epigenetic perturbations of endocrine disrupting compounds

January 29, 2015
Dr Folami Ideraabdullah, an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Genetics and Nutrition and newly appointed member of the Curriculum in Toxicology, just received a Transition to Independent Environmental Health Research (TIEHR) Career Development Award (K22) from NIEHS on a project entitled “A genetic approach to understanding mechanisms of epigenetic...

Dr Samir Kelada an Outstanding New Environmental Scientists (ONES) Career Development Award from NIEHS on Gene-Environment Interactions between Ozone and Development of Asthma.

January 29, 2015
Dr Samir Kelada is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Genetics and newly appointed member of the Curriculum in Toxicology. He just received an Outstanding New Environmental Scientists (ONES) Career Development Award from NIEHS. His proposed studies will utilize a new mouse genetics resource, the Collaborative Cross (CC), to...

Drs Watkins and Brouwer developed, DILIsym, a computer program designed to predict how drugs will affect the liver.

October 30, 2014
  DILIsym, a computer model developed by the Hamner Institutes for Health Sciences (Dr. Watkins) has been used by researchers at ºÚÁÏÍø to solve a nearly 20 year old mystery about a new drug designed to treat type 2 diabetes –Troglizatone-. After its inception in 1997 it had killed 63...