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New funding paradigms reshape
research
University hopes to build on
success in campaign for “Yale Tomorrow”
Years after gas attack, the horror
lingers in an Iranian town, EPH alumna finds
Stem cell program gets under way
at Yale with arrival of cell biologist
Et cetera
Yale licenses AIDS drug
New MR system at Yale


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New funding paradigms
reshape research
Despite a tougher climate for NIH dollars, school gets its largest
grant ever as part of Roadmap initiative.
Flat funding and a new research paradigm have turned federal funding
of medical research on its head. After the recent doubling of the budget
of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), funding has leveled off,
resulting in a net decrease thanks to inflation. And the NIH is shifting
the remaining dollars away from lone investigators to multidisciplinary
teams of scientists.

Both trends are being felt at the School of Medicine. In October the
school received its largest NIH research grant ever, a $57.3-million
Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA), a new grant designed
to encourage interdisciplinary research and the rapid movement of laboratory
findings into human studies.

The award, one of 12 made around the country, will “transform how
clinical and translational research is conducted,” said NIH Director
Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D.

The CTSA fits in with the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research, which calls
for reshaping clinical research to accelerate medical discovery. It also
fits in with the medical school’s own planning, said Dean Robert
J. Alpern, M.D., Ensign Professor of Medicine.

“A strategic planning initiative we launched in 2004 identified
clinical research as a top priority and established the Yale Center for
Clinical Investigation (YCCI), a focal point for translational research,”
Alpern said. “The YCCI’s structure, which builds on Yale’s
strengths in education, basic science and community-based research, is
virtually identical to the vision put forth by the NIH in this new program.”

“With the CTSA grant we will be able to train many more clinical
investigators, known as YCCI Scholars, who will be well-equipped to assemble
the expert interdisciplinary teams they need to do top-quality translational
research,” said Robert S. Sherwin, M.D., YCCI director and principal
investigator on the CTSA grant.

Meanwhile, scientists at Yale and other universities are finding grants
harder to acquire. Over the last two years, said Carolyn W. Slayman,
Ph.D., deputy dean for academic and scientific affairs, Yale’s
success rate has fallen, in line with national trends, but it is still
above the national average.

“Some labs might have to cut back on the number of people in the
lab, making it more difficult to complete projects,” said Lynn
Cooley, Ph.D., professor of genetics and cell biology and director of
the Combined Program in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences. “Students
and postdocs in training contribute enormously to research excellence
in their labs. Both valuable research and the pipeline of new research
talent are threatened by these budget cuts.”

Slayman said the medical school’s Grants and Contracts Office,
working with the development staff and with the Office of Cooperative
Research, is providing information on alternative funding, including
nonfederal granting agencies, foundations and corporations. She said
these efforts have met with some success—direct grant dollars to
Yale researchers increased by 5.9 percent last year.

“We are working closely with department chairs and program directors
to provide as much help as possible to faculty members who run into difficulty
with grant support,” Slayman said.

—Pem McNerney and John Curtis

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University hopes
to build on success in campaign for “Yale Tomorrow”
Nearly a decade after the close of its last major fund-raising campaign,
Yale has begun a five-year drive to raise $3 billion, a major portion
of which will be directed toward science and medicine.

At the public launch of the “Yale Tomorrow” campaign on September
30, President Richard C. Levin announced that donors have already committed
$1.3 billion in gifts and pledges during its quiet phase, which began
in mid-2004.

The public campaign kicked off with a day of presentations by noted faculty
and alumni—including medical school professors Irwin M. Braverman,
M.D. ’55; HS ’59, FW ’62; Christopher K. Breuer, M.D.;
Carolyn M. Mazure, Ph.D.; Milissa A. McKee, M.D.; R. Lawrence Moss, M.D.;
W. Mark Saltzman, Ph.D.; Bennett A. Shaywitz, M.D.; Sally E. Shaywitz,
M.D.; and Tian Xu, Ph.D.—followed by a multimedia program narrated
by actor Sam Waterston, a 1962 Yale College alumnus, and a gala dinner
in University Commons.

The campaign is organized around four major priority areas: “Yale
College,” “The Arts,” “The Sciences” and
“The World.” In the sciences Yale will seek support for programs
focused on translating basic science insights into clinically relevant
work. Among the priorities are programs in neural degeneration and repair,
stem cell biology, translational immunology, functional genomics and
clinical investigation. The ultimate goal is to find new and better methods
of diagnosing and treating illness, said medical school Dean Robert J.
Alpern, M.D., Ensign Professor of Medicine.

According to Inge Reichenbach, Yale’s vice president for development,
the campaign has set specific goals for the medical school, including
the establishment of new endowed professorships, financial aid for students,
new buildings for research and clinical care, technology resources, educational
innovation and support for the cancer hospital addition to Yale-New Haven
Hospital.

The drive comes at a time when the university is enjoying record growth
in its endowment, which grew from $5.8 billion in 1997, at the conclusion
of the university’s “… and for Yale” campaign,
to $18 billion for the fiscal year ending June 30. During that same nine-year
period, the medical school’s endowment has risen from $446.6 million
to $1.5 billion. The university has an operating budget of $1.67 billion
for 2006-2007, of which $676 million is expected to come from the endowment.

But the size of the endowment, second only to Harvard’s $29 billion
nest egg, does not mean the university has all the resources it needs
to grow in new directions, according to campaign leaders. “To expand
Yale beyond its current scale and scope, to build the Yale of tomorrow,
we will need new financial resources,” said President Levin. “Above
all, we need to complete the transformation of Yale from a local to a
regional to a national to an international university.”

Yale’s wealth is an issue that fundraising staff must address directly
with potential donors, said Jancy Houck, M.A., who became the university’s
associate vice president for development and director of medical development
and alumni affairs on September 18. Income from the current endowment
was committed to specific items at the time of the original gift decades
or more ago, she said. “It takes new resources to do new things,”
said Houck.

The same is true with grant dollars that come from the federal government,
foundations and corporations, she added. For example, the $57.3-million
Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) that the medical school
received in October (see related story), the largest grant ever received
by the school, also presents an opportunity to engage donors in conversations
about the medical school’s future.

“This support from the National Institutes of Health doesn’t
take away from our need for philanthropy, because grants are very, very
specific. You have to use the funding in the exact manner outlined in
the proposal,” said Houck. “The philanthropy that we would
be looking for would be for items that are not included in a big grant,
where people could really leverage their gift, knowing that there is
a certain amount of activity that is going to take place already.”

—Michael Fitzsousa

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After an interview in Rabat, a Kurdish town in Iran that endured high-intensity
warfare during the Iran-Iraq war, Farnoosh Hashemian, right, posed
with some of the women she interviewed.
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Years after gas attack,
the horror lingers in an Iranian town, EPH alumna finds
After every bombing, people in Sardasht, a small town at the foot of
Iran’s Zagros Mountains, ran outside to help the injured. On June
28, 1987, they rushed into a world that smelled of garlic. The air burned
like acid. Bodies were covered with blisters. Children were crying, beyond
comfort. When the blindness came, the villagers had no reason to expect
that it would be temporary. For many, it was not.

The physical effects of chemical weapons like the mustard gas that fell
on this Iranian town during the 1980-1988 war between Iran and Iraq are
well-documented: burns, respiratory problems and temporary or permanent
blindness. A new Yale study now sheds light on the psychiatric effects.
Farnoosh Hashemian, M.P.H. ’05, a research associate in the Department
of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH), has documented severe and long-term
mental health problems in Sardasht residents who survived a chemical
attack. Her data were so compelling that the Iranian government made
a psychologist, a scarce resource in the country, available to the 4,000
chemical-attack survivors in Sardasht.

Hashemian’s team published their findings in the August 2 issue
of JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. They
collected data in three Kurdish towns in rural Iran: one was bombed 10
times; another was bombed 75 times; and a third, Sardasht, was bombed
60 times and also was attacked with chemical weapons. Hashemian did not
anticipate the magnitude of distress she found in Sardasht—59 percent
of those exposed to chemical weapons had experienced post-traumatic stress
disorder, and 33 percent were still suffering from the disorder. She
found that 65 percent had major anxiety symptoms and 41 percent had severe
depressive symptoms.

Growing up in Tehran during the war, Hashemian knew that Saddam Hussein
had gassed civilians and Iranian troops. “Will he gas Tehran?”
the adults whispered. Believing a chemical attack on the Iranian capital
was imminent, her family fled the city, eventually settling in Canada.

Three years ago Hashemian returned to Iran as an EPH student on a Downs
International Health Student Travel Fellowship. Although the program
usually sends students to countries unfamiliar to them, Hashemian convinced
the review committee that rural Kurdish areas would constitute a new
culture for a woman raised in fast-paced Tehran. Her parents in Canada
were a harder sell. The border region in northern Iran is known for smugglers
and land mines. “They were very worried, but now they are proud
of me,” she said.

Hashemian collected data along with Farahnaz Falahati, M.D., a physician
with the Janbazan Medical and Engineering Research Center, the Iranian
equivalent of the Veterans Administration. The women stayed in spartan
quarters with no showers or kitchen. But Hashemian said their main challenge
was hearing the dreadful and grim stories.

Survivors reported nightmares, inability to work and relationships broken
under the weight of stress. They believed another attack would come at
any moment. Their fear was heightened during Hashemian’s visit
because the United States had just invaded Iraq. Many villagers expected
that Saddam would gas them again in retaliation for the U.S. attack.
Despite their fearfulness, they invited the researchers into their small
houses, offered them special meals and willingly told their stories.

“They felt that they had been forgotten,” Hashemian explained,
and she agrees. The international community was silent during and after
the attacks, she said.

Hashemian would like to see her work used by international organizations
seeking to eradicate chemical weapons. By documenting the suffering of
civilians—who account for most war casualties—Hashemian said,
public health professionals can raise discussions of war and peace above
the realm of politics. “War is a serious public health issue.”

—Colleen Shaddox

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Haifan Lin is leading a new scientific center for faculty working on
stem cell-related projects.
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Stem cell program gets under way
at Yale with arrival of cell biologist
One of the nation’s leading stem cell biologists arrived at Yale
last summer to lead a new program that will explore the unique properties
and therapeutic potential of these cells. Haifan Lin, Ph.D., and Associate
Director Diane S. Krause, M.D., Ph.D., an associate professor of laboratory
medicine and pathology and an expert on bone marrow stem cells, will
lead the new Yale Stem Cell Program (YSCP). They will oversee a group
of a half-dozen scientists and an administrative and technical staff
devoted to research on human embryonic and adult stem cells, as well
as stem cells in the mouse, fruit fly and roundworm.

The new center comes as the State of Connecticut has allocated $20 million
for the Connecticut Stem Cell Research Grants Program, making it one
of three states to fund this research. The YSCP has applied for funding
from the state program and its applications were still under review this
fall.

Stem cells, which can differentiate into many of the myriad cell types
that form the body’s tissues and organs, have been much in the
news as a potentially powerful treatment for diabetes, Parkinson’s
disease, heart disease, spinal cord injury and other serious illnesses.
The program will provide a scientific hub for more than 30 faculty members
across the medical school and university who work on stem cell-related
topics. Over the next few years, the YSCP will recruit four additional
faculty members.

Three core research facilities are now being put in place: a human embryonic
stem cell culture laboratory directed by Lin and Krause; a cell sorting
center directed by Mark J. Shlomchik, M.D., Ph.D., professor of laboratory
medicine and immunobiology; and a confocal microscopy laboratory directed
by Michael H. Nathanson, M.D., Ph.D., professor of medicine and cell
biology. The YSCP will eventually occupy one floor of the Amistad Building
on the southern edge of the medical school campus, which is now under
construction and slated for occupancy next year.

Lin comes to Yale from Duke University, where he was co-founder and co-director
of the Stem Cell Research Program. He received his undergraduate degree
from Fudan University in Shanghai, China, and his Ph.D. from Cornell
University in 1990. He completed his postdoctoral training at the Carnegie
Institution of Washington before joining the Department of Cell Biology
at Duke University Medical Center in 1994.

Through his discovery of stem cells in the ovary of the fruit fly and
his establishment of these cells as a research tool, Lin obtained direct
evidence for the century-old hypothesis of asymmetric division as the
means by which stem cells can both self-renew and produce daughter cells
with the ability to differentiate into many distinct cell types. Lin
has also discovered key genes that regulate stem cell division.

“Haifan Lin is a pre-eminent scientist whose research on the most
basic mechanisms of stem cell biology has had a tremendous impact on
the field,” said Dean Robert J. Alpern, M.D., Ensign Professor
of Medicine.
“He has the broad perspective needed to lead this exciting new
effort at Yale.”

—Peter Farley

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et cetera
Yale licenses AIDS drug
Yale University concluded in June a license agreement granting Oncolys
BioPharma of Tokyo exclusive rights to develop a new compound to treat
HIV. Yale has also applied for a patent for the compound, Ed4T. Preclinical
studies have already begun, and Oncolys BioPharma hopes to begin Phase
I/II clinical trials in 2008.

Ed4T is a thymidine analogue that blocks reverse transcriptase, an essential
enzyme for viral replication. The compound was discovered and developed
jointly by researchers in Japan and Yung-Chi Cheng, Ph.D., the Henry
Bronson Professor of Pharmacology at Yale.

Pharmacological studies have shown that Ed4T has more potent anti-HIV
activity than existing nucleoside-analogue reverse transcriptase inhibitors
(NRTIs) and is active against viruses that are resistant to the existing
NRTI and non-NRTI drugs. Further, Ed4T does not affect DNA synthesis
in mitochondria, a toxic side effect of some nucleotide analogues. These
findings suggested that Ed4T might offer unique therapeutic advantages
over existing anti-HIV drugs

—John Curtis



New MR system at Yale
Yale will receive a $2 million High-End Instrumentation (HEI) grant
from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) to buy a 7-Tesla
human magnetic resonance (MR) system that will facilitate ultra-high
resolution studies of diabetes, epilepsy, psychiatric disease and learning
disorders. The NCRR makes one-time awards to support the purchase of
sophisticated instruments costing more than $750,000 to advance biomedical
research and increase knowledge of the underlying causes of human disease.
Douglas L. Rothman, Ph.D., professor of diagnostic radiology and biomedical
engineering, will oversee the MR system, a shared resource for several
investigators funded by the National Institutes of Health. Yale has recruited
two new faculty members to develop new methods of biochemical image-guided
neurosurgery using the system.

—J.C.

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