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Six 91原创 graduate students offered National Institutes of Health fellowship grants

Exterior view of the Rochester Medical Center. (91原创 photo / Brandon Vick)

Five graduate students from the聽聽and one graduate student from the聽聽have been offered聽. The grants are part of a federally sponsored program that provides three years of support for students pursuing doctoral or other research-based degrees in health-related areas.

The purpose of the grants is to enhance diversity in the health-related research workforce by supporting the research training of predoctoral students from diverse backgrounds. Candidates must demonstrate outstanding scholarly promise in health-related research, be enrolled in a research doctoral degree program, have identified a research project, and made a commitment to a career as either an independent research scientist or as an independent physician-scientist or other clinician-scientist (dual-degree training) to be eligible to apply.

John Bachman 鈥19M (MS) is a PhD candidate in the cell biology of disease (pathology) program at the Medical Center, under the direction of , a dean鈥檚 associate professor of pharmacology and physiology. Bachman鈥檚 research focuses on the consequences of radiation therapy on juvenile muscle stem cells. 鈥淏y learning how radiation impacts developing muscle, we can use that information to help cancer survivors lead better and stronger lives,鈥 he says. Bachman is a native of Hazleton, Pennsylvania, and would like to pursue a postdoctoral position with the goal of becoming an independent investigator.
Project title: 鈥淭argeting p21 To Stimulate Irradiated Muscle Stem Cell Function and Muscle Regeneration鈥

Katherine Best 鈥18M (MS) is a PhD candidate in the cell biology of disease (pathology) program at the Medical Center. A native of Hilton, New York, she works in the research lab of , an associate professor of orthopedics, in the Center for Musculoskeletal Research. Best鈥檚 research focuses on understanding the functions of tendon cells during the healing of acute tendon injuries. 鈥淚 am hoping to become more involved in clinical research, specifically, clinical trials,鈥 she says.
Project title: 鈥淐ell Specific Effects of Canonical NF-kB Signaling in Tendon Healing鈥

Felicia Gilels 鈥19M (MS) is a PhD candidate in the cell biology of disease (pathology) program at the Medical Center. She works in the lab of , an associate professor of ophthalmology, and studies the molecular pathways involved in sensory development. Her research takes an approach that will inform hair cell regeneration studies and future therapeutic strategies to treat hearing loss. A native of 91原创, Gilels hopes to become an independent investigator at an academic institution studying developmental neuroscience.
Project title: 鈥淭he Role of Notch Signaling in the Maintenance and Function of Cochlear Sensory Cells鈥

Courtney Kellogg 鈥19M (MS) is a PhD candidate in the cell biology of disease (pathology) program at the Medical Center, under the direction of Amy Kiernan, an associate professor of ophthalmology. Kellogg鈥檚 project explores the role of the JAG1 gene during cochlear development. The JAG1 gene provides instructions for making a protein called Jagged-1, which is involved in cell signaling. Kellogg is from Kansas City, Missouri, and says her long-term career goal is to become an independent investigator studying congenital developmental pathologies.
Project title: “Multiple Roles of the Notch Ligand Jagged1 During Sensory Development of the Cochlea”

Marcus Kilwein 鈥18 (MS) is a PhD candidate in the biology program in the School of Arts and Sciences. Kilwein鈥檚 research focuses on lipid droplets, which are transported within cells and linked to fat metabolism and a multitude of human diseases, including obesity. Under the direction of , a professor of biology, Kilwein studies the implications of lipid droplet allocation.聽Upon receiving his PhD, Kilwein, who is from Freeport, Pennsylvania, hopes to receive a post-doctoral research appointment with the end goal of being a professor.
Project title: 鈥Effects of Cellular Lipid Droplet Allocation on Lipid Droplet Consumption and Drosophila Embryogenesis鈥

Daphne Pariser 鈥17M (MS) is a PhD candidate in the immunology, microbiology, and virology (IMV) program at the Medical Center. She works in the lab of , using in vitro techniques and in vivo mouse models to study the function of platelets and megakaryocytes (Mks). Pariser鈥檚 project focuses on lung Mks as an antigen-presenting cell that coordinates certain聽aspects of the immune response.聽Pariser is from southern California and is also聽the founder of the nonprofit (H4E), an organization that aims to reduce poverty by building sustainable businesses so community members can afford聽education and health care.
Project title: 鈥淟ung Megakaryocytes Are Present Antigen To CD4 T Cells鈥澛