UAMS, University of Tennessee Health Science Center Researchers Receive CORNET Award Funding Cancer Research

By ChaseYavondaC

Each team, made up of one UAMS researcher and one UTHSC researcher, will receive between $41,000 and $50,000 in pilot funding for one year, combining for a total of $191,000 in cancer research. The UTHSC/UAMS CORNET Awards in Cancer are designed to provide seed money to stimulate innovative, interdisciplinary, team-based cancer research, and prompt future extramural funding. Each institution contributed to the funding.

The research teams and topics are as follows:

“I believe we are seeing the beginning of several new collaborations involving investigators from UAMS and UTHSC that will advance our understanding of cancer as well as lead to new treatments and diagnostics,” said Lawrence Cornett, Ph.D., UAMS vice chancellor for research. “It’s been gratifying to see the response of cancer investigators from these two institutions following the 2017 Cancer Research Conference in Memphis.”

More than 100 cancer researchers met in May for the inaugural Cancer Research Conference at UTHSC to encourage partnerships and announce the UTHSC/UAMS CORNET Awards in Cancer.

“UTHSC and UAMS are both very strong research institutions that are close in physical proximity and have overlapping scientific areas of excellence,” said Steven R. Goodman, Ph.D., UTHSC vice chancellor for research. “Dr. Cornett and I are providing a platform on which our respective faculty can find research synergies where the sum is greater than the individual parts. We expect that these CORNET awards will be a springboard towards greater collaborative efforts leading to groundbreaking research and better treatments and cures for many forms of cancer.”

The UTHSC/UAMS CORNET Awards were conceived by Cornett and Goodman. While these are the first CORNET Awards in Cancer, the two institutions awarded funding to two researchers last year for substance abuse research.

Cynthia Kane, Ph.D., a professor in the UAMS College of Medicine’s Department of Neurobiology and Developmental Sciences, and Kristin Hamre, Ph.D., an assistant professor in anatomy and neurobiology at UTHSC, received $50,000 for a one-year study on the impact of alcohol on fetal brain development.