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Jul 31, 2017
Insider
PRESS RELEASE

In response to a comparison between body-shaming and racism made publicly by actress Martine McCutcheon, Insider cites research led by Angelina Sutin at the College of Medicine to discuss how fat shaming has a worse mental and physical effect on health than racism or sexism does.

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Aug 03, 2017
Philly.com
PRESS RELEASE

 Alice Pomidor, a geriatrics professor in the College of Medicine, urges the importance of bringing up the subject of driving with her patients over 75.

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Aug 07, 2017
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

At the College of Medicine, Bridge Program students, full-fledged medical students, as well as hospital residents cycle through settings that replicate a modern doctor’s office suite and its examining rooms, as well as a hospital setting. And in each room, there is a “faux” patient waiting with a complaint, a pain, a symptom for the young doctors-to-be to figure out.

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Aug 08, 2017
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

Supported by a new $800,000 National Science Foundation grant, Florida State University College of Medicine Professor Yi Ren is studying the immune response to spinal cord injuries and how cellular functions contribute to paralysis and organ dysfunction.

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Aug 08, 2017
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

Backed by an NIH grant exceeding $3.2 million, Greg Hajcak will serve as co-principal investigator on a study measuring the brain activity of adolescents. He and his team will examine whether attention training has an effect on anxiety risk.

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Aug 08, 2017
SELF.com
PRESS RELEASE

Joan Meek, the Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education and professor at the College of Medicine, is quoted in an article discussing the risks of alcohol consumption during breastfeeding.

News of the Week

Kato receives NIH grant for cilium research

Biomedical Sciences Professor Yoichi Kato has been awarded a National Institutes of Health grant of nearly $365,000 to study the "transition zone" of the cilium.

The cilium is a small cellular organelle that broadly exists throughout the human body. Defects of ciliary structure and/or function in humans cause “ciliopathies,” including retinal degeneration, cardiac defect, airway defect, polycystic kidney, sterility, obesity and mental retardation. The cilium consists of three major parts: basal body, transition zone and axoneme. Many causative factors of ciliopathies have been known to exist in the transition zone, which is important for protein trafficking between the cell cytoplasm and the inside of the cilium. Dysfunction of the transition zone results in no and/or abnormal cilia.

Although the functions of cilia and the mechanisms of cilia formation have been revealed during the past decade, the molecular mechanisms underlying the formation of the transition zone remain to be explored. 

It was recently reported that blocking the Smad2/3-dependent TGF-β signal pathway shortened cilia in several different tissues of Xenopus embryos (Tozser et al. 2015). That defect seems to be caused by functional and/or structural problems of the transition zone. In this project, Kato's lab will assess and uncover TGF-β-dependent formation and/or function of the transition zone and discover novel factors involved in the process. 
 

News of the Week

Wang lab's paper published in Cell Reports

Biomedical Sciences Professor Yanchang Wang's lab team will have a paper published in the upcoming edition of Cell Reports. The title is "Fin1-PP1 Helps Clear Spindle Assembly Checkpoint Protein Bub1 from Kinetochores in Anaphase." The paper's authors are graduate student Michael Bokros, Honors Medical Scholar Curtis Gravenmier, Research Scholar Scientist Fengzhi Jin, Biomedical Sciences Ph.D. alumnus Daniel Richmond and Wang.

The cover of Cell Reports will also have a College of Medicine connection. It was designed by Jodi Slade, certified medical illustrator in the Office of Medical Education.

News of the Week

First-year grant goes to Yuan Wang

Yuan Wang, assistant professor of biomedical sciences, has received a $20,000 grant from FSU's Council on Research & Creativity. The title of her research project is "Role of FMRP in Afferent Regulated Neuronal Survival." This is a First-Year Assistant Professor Grant from the CRC, a major faculty committee appointed by the vice president for research. 

News of the Week

McCarthy receives CRC grant

Assistant Scholar Deirdre McCarthy, who works in the laboratory of Biomedical Sciences Professor Pradeep Bhide, has received a grant from FSU's Council on Research & Creativity. 

McCarthy's project is "Nicotine-Induced Epigenetic Modification of Human Spermatozoal DNA." The award is for $14,000. 

The CRC is a major faculty committee appointed by the vice president for research.