News
19 February 2025
Meet the Faculty: Randal Halfmann, Ph.D., on the 'freedom to explore’ your curiosity
Stowers Associate Investigator Randal Halfmann, Ph.D., puts it simply: “Stowers offers an opportunity unlike any other program.”
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Several researchers at the Stowers Institute received award notifications during the past few months, including investigators, a postdoctoral researcher, and predoctoral researchers.
Several researchers at the Stowers Institute received award notifications during the past few months, including investigators, a postdoctoral researcher, and predoctoral researchers.
KANSAS CITY, MO—Several lab leaders at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research received award notifications during the past few months.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) renewed a grant for Investigator and Associate Scientific Director Kausik Si, PhD, extending funding for another five years to support his research on intron-retention in the adult brain. Investigator Ron Yu, PhD, received a one-year supplement for his NIH R01 grant, allowing him to expand his project on the mechanisms of developmental plasticity in the mammalian olfactory system.
Top row: Randal Halfmann, Ron Yu, Kausik Si, Paul Kulesa
Bottom row: Qiushuang Wu, Alex Rodriguez Gama, Katie Billmyre
The American Cancer Society awarded a Research Scholar Grant to Assistant Investigator Randal Halfmann, PhD. The three-year grant is related to his work on the role of protein aggregation in cancer-promoting inflammation. Finally, Director of Imaging Paul Kulesa, PhD, received a one-year grant from the St. Baldrick’s Foundation for his research on a platform to enhance neuroblastoma prediction.
Two Stowers predoctoral researchers were also recipients of grant funding. Qiushuang Wu and Alex Rodriguez Gama each received an NIH Predoctoral to Postdoctoral Fellow Transition Award (F99/K00). The two-phase award provides two years of funding for predoctoral research, with four years’ additional support for a postdoctoral position. For Wu, a member of the Bazzini Lab, the fellowship will support her research on mechanisms of protein translation. In the Halfmann Lab, Rodriguez Gama is studying the role of protein self-assembly in the innate immune system.
Most recently, Hawley Lab Postdoctoral Researcher Katie Billmyre, PhD, was awarded a Pathway to Independence (K99/R00) fellowship from the NIH. This five-year award is designed to support researchers as they transition from mentored postdoctoral roles into independent research positions. Billmyre, who received a DeLill Nasser award for Professional Development in Genetics from the Genetics Society of America, studies the molecular and cellular mechanisms behind chromosome-specific behaviors during meiosis.
About the Stowers Institute for Medical Research
The Stowers Institute for Medical Research is a non-profit, basic biomedical research organization dedicated to basic research – the critical first step in the quest for new medical diagnostics, therapies and treatments. Jim Stowers, founder of American Century Investments, and his wife, Virginia, opened the Institute in 2000. Since then, the Institute has spent over one billion dollars in pursuit of its mission.
Currently, the Institute is home to about 500 researchers and support personnel, over 20 independent research programs, and more than a dozen technology development and core facilities. Learn more about the Institute at www.stowers.org and about its graduate program at www.stowers.org/gradschool.
News
19 February 2025
Stowers Associate Investigator Randal Halfmann, Ph.D., puts it simply: “Stowers offers an opportunity unlike any other program.”
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News
09 August 2024
Five scientists' prestigious awards are a testament to the innovative, curiosity-driven, and profound impact and scope of foundational biological research the Institute is committed to fostering.
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News
24 June 2024
The Faculty EDGE series is just one of many advantages of the postdoctoral training program at the Stowers Institute.
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News
23 May 2024
Though presently incurable, research from Stowers Associate Investigator Randal Halfmann, Ph.D., is helping improve our understanding of how the ALS amyloid protein that forms aggregates in the brain first starts. Recently, the team made an unexpected, exciting discovery that offers hope for the future.
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