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Mark John Ranek
Johns Hopkins University
$2,056,172
Attributed
$2,056,172
Total exposure
2
Grants
2
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants. They are the sole PI on all grants (the two match).
Funding over time
peak $701.2K · FY2023–25$1M$750K$500K$250K$0
'23
'24
'25
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$2,056,172 · 2
By mechanism
R01$1,386,435 · 1
R56$669,737 · 1
Top collaborators
No co-investigators on record.
Most similar at Johns Hopkins University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Anthony Cammarato$4,199,816
- D Brian Foster$2,370,051
- Lewis H Romer$4,668,241
- Brian Leei Lin$758,660
- Erika S. Berman-Rosenzweig$2,160,271
Others in their field
Other Rising Stars on “Excretory Function”
- Colin Osborne · University Of Texas Med Br Galveston$10,407,745
- Debra Burnin · Sri International$9,467,087
- Moustafa Gabr · Weill Medical Coll Of Cornell Univ$5,945,506
- David Burkhart · Inimmune Corporation$5,907,864
- Julian A Symons · Hackensack University Medical Center$4,228,031
- Sean B. Joseph · Scripps Research Institute, The$4,224,287
Research focus
Excretory FunctionGene MutationDepressed MoodExcisionFibroblastsFunctional DisorderAmyloid FibrilsDepositionDevicesDissociationFemaleCardiac MyocytesCardiac Tissue EngineeringBiobankCell DeathComplexBiopsyAffectAttenuatedCyclic Gmp-Dependent Protein KinasesCytotoxicityCardiacCardiac AmyloidosisGenes
Grant awards (3)
Chip phosphorylation stimulates the degradation of mutant transthyretin to attenuate cardiac amyloidosis$685,249
R01 · FY2025 · HL · contact PI
Chip phosphorylation stimulates the degradation of mutant transthyretin to attenuate cardiac amyloidosis$701,186
R01 · FY2024 · HL · contact PI
Chip phosphorylation stimulates the degradation of mutant transthyretin to attenuate cardiac amyloidosis$669,737
R56 · FY2023 · HL · contact PI