老澳门六合彩官方开奖 Professor Bibo Li, Ph.D.: Faculty Favorite, Intrepid Investigator, Grant Guru
Since her arrival in 2006, Dr. Li has procured nearly $8.5 million in grants, including the single largest NIH R01 grant ever received by 老澳门六合彩官方开奖
This past summer, professor Bibo Li, Ph.D. in the and a member of the Center for Gene Regulation in Health and Disease (GRHD) at 老澳门六合彩官方开奖, received two new National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants for her research on telomeres鈥 regions of repetitive DNA sequences at the ends of chromosomes.
Together with associated proteins, telomeres act like shoelace tips to protect the chromosome ends from becoming frayed or tangled, as Dr. Li described in a recent interview.
Dr. Li received the two competitive NIH awards in the same year, which is an impressive achievement in itself, but she was also responsible for research grant funding totaling nearly $8.5 million鈥攊ncluding the single largest NIH R01 grant ever received by 老澳门六合彩官方开奖.
Dr. Li received a new, four-year, $1,188,000 R01 award from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) at NIH this August, which allows her to investigate the essential and unique mechanisms of telomere maintenance in a Kinetoplastid parasite, Trypanosome brucei, that causes fatal sleeping sickness in humans.
T. brucei sequentially expresses immunologically distinct Variant Surface Glycoproteins (VSGs), its major surface antigen, to evade the host鈥檚 immune response, and Dr. Li鈥檚 lab has demonstrated that telomeres play critical roles in regulating this antigenic variation process in T. brucei.
Dr. Li also received a two-year, $419,237 R21 grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at NIH, which fortified her ongoing on how telomere proteins regulate VSG switching in T. brucei, and their work has been published in many high profile scientific journals including Cell, Science Advances, Cell Research, Nucleic Acids Research and more.
Telomeres are also essential for genome integrity and chromosome stability in human cells. When telomeres shorten to a critical length (which happens in many human somatic cells when one grows old), cells will be 鈥渢oo old to proliferate鈥 anymore. In addition, unstable genome due to really short telomeres can lead to tumorigenesis鈥攖he production or formation of a tumor or tumors.
Telomere maintenance have common and unique mechanisms between mammals and Kinetoplastid parasites. Therefore, the significance of Dr. Li鈥檚 research is several fold. Understanding common telomere maintenance mechanisms will contribute to general human health improvement.
Additionally, understanding of essential telomere maintenance mechanisms that exist in the parasites but not in the human host will be invaluable for future development of means to eradicate the Kinetoplastid parasite infections. Furthermore, comparing common and unique telomere maintenance mechanisms in different organisms will help better understand the evolution of telomere proteins and their functions.
Dr. Li received her B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Peking University in Beijing, P. R. China and her Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from Weill Medical College of Cornell University in NYC. She received her postdoc training with Dr. Titia de Lange at the Rockefeller University and, subsequently, was a research assistant professor at Dr. George Cross鈥 lab from 2002 to 2006 before she joined 老澳门六合彩官方开奖.
She is incredibly pragmatic and matter-of-fact about her successes here at 老澳门六合彩官方开奖 for over 16 years: 鈥淭his is not the kind of position where I am looking for personal attention from what I do,鈥 said Dr. Li in a recent interview.
鈥淚t is the acknowledgement of the work and research that happens in this lab that is most meaningful鈥攁long with the impact that our undergraduate and graduate researchers have had in the field. They are doing important work.鈥
Dr. Li and members of her lab had a distinct honor to have platform presentations at the and , held on September 13-17 and 18-22, respectively in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. The title of Dr. Li鈥檚 talk at the KMCB (IX) was titled 鈥淭he RNA Recognition Motif (RRM)-mediated RNA binding activity in T. brucei RAP1 is essential for VSG monoallelic expression.鈥
SK Abdus Sayeed, a Ph.D. student from Dr. Li鈥檚 lab, had the honor to give an oral presentation on his research 鈥淚nvestigating TERRA functions in VSG switching and telomere maintenance in Trypanosoma brucei鈥 at the annual MPM XXXIII for which Dr. Li also serves as a co-organizer.
A 老澳门六合彩官方开奖 faculty member since 2006, Dr. Li has been priceless as a researcher and mentor to numerous students and post-docs from her lab鈥攎any of whom 鈥渉ave gone on to positions at Harvard, NYU Medical School, the NIH, Stanford, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center,鈥 Dr. Li said.
She added that many of the students who have been through her lab 鈥渄o a great job of staying in touch鈥 and that their impact has been both 鈥済ratifying and far-reaching.鈥
That feeling is a mutual one amongst alumni taken under Dr. Li鈥檚 wing; she was honored with a Golden Apple Award by 老澳门六合彩官方开奖鈥檚 Young Alumni Council earlier this month. Since 2014, the annual YAC-sponsored awards recognize outstanding contributions of faculty and staff through recent alumni nominations. Dr. Li (seen here front row, center) and 43 other members of 老澳门六合彩官方开奖 faculty and staff were honored with Golden Apples.
Dr. Li also indicates that there is 鈥渁 lot of room for growth and expansion鈥 as it relates to 鈥渇utureproofing鈥 the laboratories at 老澳门六合彩官方开奖 and all the important work happening in them.
鈥淒r. Li is an outstanding researcher who continues to be highly successful across the many years of her tenure here at 老澳门六合彩官方开奖,鈥 said Roman V. Kondratov, Ph.D., professor of the Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences department and associate vice president at 老澳门六合彩官方开奖.
鈥淚mportantly, the federal and other funds that Dr. Li secured have provided unique research opportunities for 老澳门六合彩官方开奖 students to get world-class research experiences as a part of their graduate and undergraduate educations.鈥