Print

Nov 20, 2019
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

In an article for the Tallahassee Democrat, Tomeka Norton-Brown, project coordinator for ACTS 2 wrote, "Caregivers are some of the strongest people I know. They’re dedicated, reliable and selfless. In my line of work, we also know that selflessness – though admirable – can be harmful to your health." Her article was written in recognition of National Family Caregivers Month.

Press Release

FSU Research: Ketamine Could Help Men Suffering From Alcohol Use Disorder

CONTACT: Bill Wellock, University Communications
(850) 645-1504; wwellock@fsu.edu

@FSUResearch

November 2019


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Research from Florida State University is giving physicians a better understanding of ketamine, a potentially useful tool in treating depression that still has unanswered questions.
 
A team of researchers working in the laboratory of Mohamed Kabbaj, a professor of Biomedical Sciences and Neuroscience in the College of Medicine, showed that ketamine can decrease alcohol consumption in male rats that previously had consumed high amounts of alcohol when given unrestricted access several times a week. The neuroscience journal eNeuro published the research in its November edition.
 
There are no perfect treatments for alcoholism, Kabbaj said. Many patients relapse within a year after treatment.
 
“What makes ketamine interesting in our study is that it reduced alcohol intake, and the effect was long-lasting even after we stopped ketamine treatment,” he said.
 
Ketamine is a promising frontier in psychiatric treatment. Existing antidepressants don’t work for all patients, so scientists are looking for other effective options. Ketamine is one possibility. In March 2019, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a nasal spray that includes a form of ketamine for use on patients with depression who didn’t respond to other treatments.
 
But doctors still have questions about how ketamine works. This latest research is one piece of a larger investigation by Kabbaj’s team to learn more about the drug, specifically its interactions with alcohol, the number one drug abused by depressed patients.
 
In this study, researchers examined how ketamine affected the rats’ alcohol consumption and how that alcohol intake affected their self-administration of ketamine.
 
The major finding in the study was that high-alcohol intake male rats displayed a significant reduction in alcohol consumption after a regimen of ketamine compared to rats that received a saline solution. The effect lasted for at least three weeks even after stopping ketamine treatment, suggesting a long-term benefit of ketamine in reducing alcohol use.
 
“Three weeks is a long time in a rat’s life,” Kabbaj said. “If a similar thing happened in humans, one could imagine that after a short treatment with ketamine, alcoholic patients would cease alcohol intake for a couple of years. That would be a great achievement.”
 
Ketamine didn’t affect high-alcohol female rats, and interestingly, it increased drinking in low-alcohol females. Researchers said clinical studies for men and for women are needed before ketamine is used as a therapy for alcoholism in either sex.
 
The National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse provided funding for this study.
 

###

Dean's Message, November 2019

Nov 15, 2019

Dear faculty, staff, and students:

I have heard many of you ask how we did in our LCME site visit and what the final determination of the LCME was.  I am writing to provide follow-up on both our April 2019 LCME site visit and their review of our program.   The LCME met last month in Chicago to review the final report of the site visit team.  I again want to thank all the faculty, staff, and students who worked so hard preparing for our site visit and meeting with the site visit team when they were here from 14-17 April.  We received the Draft Site Visit Survey Report from the Team Secretary in July and had an opportunity to respond to areas that we felt were not accurately assessed.  The final Survey Team Report and the Final Letter from the LCME last month did not result in significant changes after that review. 

 I refer you to my e-mail of 8/2/2019 which outlined the many areas where the team found we met or exceeded expectations.  A group of us met with the Secretariat of the LCME at the AAMC meeting this past Monday to get further clarification on their areas of concern.  Now that we have the final report from the LCME and our conversation with them, we better understand the specific areas we need to work on to maintain full compliance with the accreditation standards and where the team had concerns. I am confident that we can easily fix each of those areas and none place our educational program at risk.  Our school is still fully accredited by the LCME and I continue to be very proud of our model, our great students, our faculty and our staff.   We will have a LCME Secretariat visit this summer to provide consultation on our action plans to move into full compliance with the standards and I anticipate this will be a very productive visit.

Thank you for all you do every day to make this such a great place to work and thrive.  Go Noles!  

J.

John P. Fogarty, M.D.

Dean

Florida State University College of Medicine

 

Press Release

FSU Students Earn Gold Medal at International Synthetic Biology Competition

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

CONTACT: Mark Blackwell Thomas

(850) 644-2065; mbthomas@fsu.edu

 

November 2019

 

TALLAHASSEE — A team of 15 Florida State University undergraduate students earned a gold medal at the International Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) competition Nov. 4 in Boston. 

 

FSU’s entry competed in a field of 360 teams from around the world. FSU was one of only eight American teams to earn gold and the first team from Florida. The other gold medal-winning American teams were MIT, Cornell, Virginia, Rice, Pittsburgh, UT-Austin and a combined squad from Stanford, Princeton, and Brown. 

 

“There is no shortage of talented students at FSU,” said Dr. Cesar Rodriguez, research faculty I and entrepreneur in residence in the College of Medicine, who serves as the team’s adviser. “It was incredibly heartwarming to see that demonstrated so concretely.” 

 

The team tackled the issue of citrus greening, a disease which causes citrus trees to produce fruit that is green, misshapen, bitter and unsuitable for consumption. From 2007-2014, the Associated Press estimates citrus greening has seen Florida orange growers lose $2.9 billion.  

 

The FSU students developed a cocktail including three antimicrobial peptides to eliminate the bacteria that is causing greening and guard against the emergence of resistant strains.

 

In addition to getting each participant project-based experience, a goal of iGEM is to bring together team members from multiple disciplines, Rodriguez said. He added that FSU’s 15 team members represented seven different majors.

 

“Putting together people from such different disciplines is very challenging,” he said. “But when you get it done, there is a magic that comes from it, and those teams can do things that others just can’t do.”

 

In addition to developing a compelling biological science and engineering project, the team also created a comprehensive presentation, a poster and a website.

 

Roderick Meyer, a senior from Fleming Island, Florida, said working alongside teammates with different backgrounds is its own benefit. 

 

“Being on a team with like-minded people is one thing, but when you’re working on a multidisciplinary team, you are introduced to an entirely different realm of ideas and schools of thoughts, which everyone can benefit from,” he wrote in an email. “Every single day was a learning experience for each member of the team.”

 

Meyer said that seeing FSU’s name in the gold category was a “we did it” moment.

 

“I was overcome with pride,” he wrote. “I’m not scared to admit I cried — a lot. Our achievement goes to show the power of a well-designed team.”

 

Jacob Gottlieb, a junior from Coral Springs, Florida, lauded the virtues of the experience. From the practical application of cutting-edge science to how this solution could play out in the modern marketplace, Gottlieb noted that iGEM offered a broad set of experiences and lessons that he’ll carry with him into his professional career and beyond. 

 

“And,” he said, “the way this looks on a resume is magnificent.” 

 

For more information on FSU’s gold medal-winning iGEM project, visit https://2019.igem.org/Team:FSU.

 

 

###

 

 

 international synthetic biology competition


FSU's gold-medal winning iGEM team. Pictured from left to right: Shams Dhanani, Jessie Griesheimer, Kathleen McClellan, Randy Rettberg, Juan-Martin Portilla, Derica Parathundil, Jacob Gottlieb, Hannah Pascoe, Mezindia Blessing Nkembo, Roderick Meyer, and Nicholas Vazquez.