In The News
03 July 2024
2024 Innovators and Influencers: Kausik Si, Ph.D.
From In Kansas City Magazine: Meet 10 people, including Stowers Scientific Director Kausik Si, Ph.D., who are making a difference in Kansas City.
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Concluding a lengthy and in-depth review of three scientific research programs, the Stowers Scientific Advisory Board recommends promotion and renewal.
Matt Gibson, PhD, researches how dividing cells become regimented into highly organized layers known as epithelia. Epithelial tissue covers multiple surfaces, lines cavities, and provides a variety of functions for an organism. He seeks to understand the mechanisms that coordinate this tissue’s architecture.
Gibson’s research is a comparative analysis of epithelial morphogenesis, architecture and growth control in fruit flies and the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, whose genome exhibits a surprising degree of complexity and similarity to the vertebrate genome. Gibson’s epithelia research is likely to produce broad phylogenetic significance as well as direct relevance to epithelial cancers and other forms of proliferative disease.
What are the biochemical mechanisms that create long-term memory and produce a persistent change in behavior? This question forms the basis of the research programs of Kausik Si, PhD. What Si currently knows is that a messenger RNA (mRNA) binding protein called cytoplasmic polyadenylation element binding (CPEB) is involved in the persistence and recall of long-term memory. The CPEB protein also forms stable aggregates similar to prion-like proteins.
Si’s research program utilizes the fruit fly version of CPEB to interrogate how and specifically where these proteins form into a prion-like aggregate that facilitates synaptic changes associated with memory storage, yet without the destructive results of true prions. He is also exploring what happens to these protein aggregates when memory is forgotten or decayed.
When Investigator Ting Xie, PhD, joined the Stowers Institute in 2000 he established a research program that examines the mechanisms by which stem cells differentiate to become specialized cells. Xie has continued his exploration of stem cell communities called niches and the relationships of stem cells within the niche.
Much like siblings in a family, sometimes stem cells cooperate and at other times they compete for attention. Cancer stem cells, which drive tumor growth, take advantage of competition to push “good” stem cells out of the niche, leading to tissue destruction. Xie’s quest is to enable future therapies by revealing key aspects of stem cell regulation in animal model systems and determining what’s similar in humans.
In The News
03 July 2024
From In Kansas City Magazine: Meet 10 people, including Stowers Scientific Director Kausik Si, Ph.D., who are making a difference in Kansas City.
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In The News
08 March 2024
From KSHB, one of the area's top scientists, Kausik Si, Ph.D., from the Stowers Institute received a coveted award for his "paradigm shifting" work to understand how our memory works and how that defines us.
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Press Release
21 February 2024
Scientific Director Kausik Si from the Stowers Institute for Medical Research alongside Investigator Lukasz Joachimiak from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center received CZI's Collaborative Pairs Pilot Project Awards grant for their project titled, “Tuning memory by altering amyloids.”
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News
06 October 2023
Forty-nine members reached 20 years of service at the Stowers Institute. The Institute founders, Jim and Virginia Stowers, envisioned establishing the Institute as a long-term investment for advancing foundational knowledge in biology for the benefit of all.
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