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December 14, 2007
Research Collaboration Grants Announced
Researchers from university, health sciences center receive more than $400,000 for collaborative projects.
Written by Sally Post
The grant program provides incentive for scientists at the two universities to collaborate on research projects. Recipients were acknowledged during the Dec. regents’ meeting. (L-R) Jordan Berg, Joe Fralick, Alice Young and Gregory Schrimsher.
Two research projects showcasing the collaborative efforts between the university and health sciences center have been awarded funding.
One project, funded for $253,342, looks at how binge drinking affects adolescents’ and college-age adults’ brain development and function. The second project, funded for $218,856, seeks to develop innovative biomedical or environmental sensors based on engineered bacterial viruses.
Funding comes from the Research Collaboration Grant program. Now in its second year, the program provides incentive for scientists at the two universities to collaborate on research projects. The program grew out of discussions between the Texas Tech Board of Regents and university administrators on how to increase research.
“We are unique in that we have a research university and a health sciences center located on the same campus,” said Chancellor Kent Hance. “These grants will further encourage large, multidisciplinary projects that have the potential to introduce new areas of academic collaboration between the two universities.”
Proposals for the grants were judged by a panel of external experts and funds awarded based on the projects’ likelihood of generating major extramural funding from sources such as the National Institutes of Health.
Bacteriophage Research
Jordan Berg, professor of mechanical engineering at TTU, and Joe Fralick, professor of microbiology and immunology at HSC, are developing sensors using bacteriophages, which are viruses that infect bacteria. Bacteriophages are commonly used in genetics and are also applied therapeutically to combat infection. In this project, genetically-modified phages will be used to create fast, inexpensive diagnostic sensors capable of performing an assortment of tasks, including testing blood samples for specific proteins or other biomarkers and monitoring drinking water for harmful substances or organisms.
Sergey Nikishin, associate professor of electrical engineering at TTU, is co-principal investigator on this project.
Binge Drinking Research
Alice Young, professor of psychology at TTU and Gregory Schrimsher, assistant professor of neuropsychiatry and behavioral sciences at the HSC, lead a group of researchers exploring whether binge drinking poses a special risk for adolescents and college-age adults based on how long, how often and how much they binge drink. The funding will allow the researchers to measure the effects of binge drinking on cognitive function and brain chemistry in rodent models. Funding will also enable use of functional MRI imaging and cognitive tests to explore changes in brain activity and memory, attention, and other cognitive abilities in college-age individuals who engage in binge drinking. The researchers hope to use this grant to create potential for generating major external funding to form a National Institute of Health Alcohol Research Center.
Co-principal investigators on the project are Peter Syapin, professor of pharmacology and neuroscience at the HSC; Michael O’Boyle, professor of human development and family studies at TTU; Susan Bergeson, associate professor of pharmacology and neuroscience at the HSC; Lee Cohen, associate professor of psychology and Charles Bradley, professor of pathology and obstetrics and gynecology at the HSC.
Related
Texas Tech University’s Vice President for Research, Dean O. Smith, oversees a program of initiatives supported by a combined total of $48.7 million in external funding for the institution.

Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses that infect specific bacteria, usually causing their disintegration or dissolution.
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According to the CDC, about 90% of the alcohol consumed by youth under the age of 21 in the United States is in the form of binge drinking.
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Learn more about the Texas Tech University–Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center Research Collaboration Grant.
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