Sort
24,576 grants matching “microbiome”
Dynamics of Immune Response in Irradiated Rectal Cancer
$1,477,107Silvia C Formenti · Weill Medical Coll Of Cornell Univ · U54 · FY2023 · CA
Metagenomic Studies of the Gut Microbiomes of Obese and Lean Twins
$1,476,522Jeffrey Ivan Gordon · Washington University · P01 · FY2008 · DK
Mapping polymicrobial interactions that modulate antibiotic persistence
$1,476,000Wendy W.k. Mok · University Of Connecticut Sch Of Med/Dnt · DP2 · FY2021 · GM
A universal pipeline for functional characterization of the human microbiota at a massive scale
$1,475,934Cullen Richard Buie · Massachusetts Institute Of Technology · RM1 · FY2022 · GM
A universal pipeline for functional characterization of the human microbiota at a massive scale
$1,475,934Cullen Richard Buie · Massachusetts Institute Of Technology · RM1 · FY2023 · GM
A universal pipeline for functional characterization of the human microbiota at a massive scale
$1,475,934Cullen Richard Buie · Massachusetts Institute Of Technology · RM1 · FY2024 · GM
The Mutant Mouse Resource and Research Center at the University of Missouri - Resource
$1,475,449Craig L Franklin · University Of Missouri-Columbia · U42 · FY2020 · OD
Recruitment and Data Collection
$1,474,736Unhee Lim · University Of Hawaii At Manoa · P01 · FY2012 · CA
INFLUENCE OF THE UNIQUE TUMOR IMMUNE MICROENVIRONMENT AND THE MICROBIOME ON PROSTATE CANCER IMMUNOTHERAPY RESPONSE IN BLACK MEN
$1,473,751The Johns Hopkins University · · FY2024 · Defense Health Agency
University of Washington Interdisciplinary Center for Exposures, Diseases, Genomics & Environment
$1,473,148Joel Daniel Kaufman · University Of Washington · P30 · FY2024 · ES
ARMOR Trial
$1,473,147Patricia M Corby · University Of Pennsylvania · U01 · FY2020 · DE
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Genetics Consortium Data Coordinating Center
$1,472,877Judy H Cho · Icahn School Of Medicine At Mount Sinai · U24 · FY2018 · DK
Environmental Health Sciences Research Center
$1,472,872Hans-Joachim Lehmler · University Of Iowa · P30 · FY2025 · ES
Immunopathogenic Mechanisms of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Disease
$1,470,482Irini Sereti · National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases · ZIA · FY2025 · AI
Commensal microbiome impact on CD4 T cell lymphopenia in HIV-1 infection
$1,470,393Souheil Antoine Younes · Emory University · R01 · FY2025 · AG
THIS PROJECT IS RELEVANT AND INNOVATIVE TO THE HEALTH OF PERI AND POSTMENOPAUSAL FEMALES FOR MANY REASONS. MODERN MEDICINE DOES NOTHING TO PREVENT OR SLOW DOWN THIS HIGHLY VULNERABLE PERIOD OF BONE LOSS WHICH, IS THE TIME PERIOD WHEN BONE LOSS IS THE GREATEST. IF OUR PROJECT CAN SLOW DOWN AND OR PREVENT BONE LOSS IT CAN POTENTIALLY PREVENT/DELAY OSTEOPOROSIS IN FEMALES- WHICH IS A HUGE BENEFIT. THE LATE PERIMENOPAUSAL AND EARLY POSTMENOPAUSE PERIOD REPRESENTS AN OPPORTUNISTIC WINDOW FOR STUDY BECAUSE BONE LOSS IS AT ITS GREATEST AT THIS TIME WITH FEMALES LOSING AS MUCH AS 6-7% OF BONE. WE ARE PROPOSING TO UTILIZE A WHOLE FOOD, PRUNES, TO SLOW DOWN AND PREVENT BONE LOSS BECAUSE WE HAVE HAD SUCCESS IN SLOWING DOWN AND PREVENTING BONE LOSS IN OLDER POSTMENOPAUSAL FEMALES. IF THIS PROJECT IS SUCCESSFUL AT ATTENUATING BONE LOSS, IT CAN IMMEDIATELY BE DISSEMINATED TO THE PUBLIC TO PROMOTE PRUNE CONSUMPTION TO SLOW DOWN AND ATTENUATE PERIMENOPAUSAL BONE LOSS. AS SUCH, THIS PROJECT COULD IMPROVE THE LONG-TERM BONE HEALTH OF FEMALES AND AVOID OR DELAY OSTEOPOROSIS AND IMPROVE QUALITY OF LIFE. OUR LONG-TERM GOAL IS TO TEST THE NOVEL HYPOTHESIS THAT PRUNE CONSUMPTION FOR 18 MONTHS DURING THE 3-YEAR LATE PERIMENOPAUSALAND EARLY POSTMENOPAUSEPERIOD PREVENTS THE DRAMATIC RATE OF BONE LOSS IN PERIMENOPAUSAL FEMALES DURING A WINDOW OF HEIGHTENED PHYSIOLOGICAL VULNERABILITY. AT PENN STATE UNIVERSITY (DE SOUZA, PI), WE WILL COMPARE THE EFFECTS OF 18 MONTHS OF DAILY DIETARY CONSUMPTION OF 50 G OF PRUNES (5-6) VERSUS A NO-PRUNE CONTROL GROUP ON BONE OUTCOMES (DEXA-DERIVED BMD, PQCT-DERIVED BONE GEOMETRY), MECHANISTIC FACTORS (BONE AND INFLAMMATORY MARKERS, INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE OF EX VIVO CULTURED PBMCS, MONOCYTES), AND GUT MICROBIOME. THIS PROPOSAL IS SUBMITTED IN RESPONSE TO A SPECIFIC COMMODITY BOARD TOPIC: CONDUCT CLINICAL TRIALS DURING LATE PERIMENOPAUSALAND EARLY POSTMENOPAUSEIN FEMALES TO STUDY THE LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF PRUNE CONSUMPTION ON BONE HEALTH.
$1,470,000The Pennsylvania State University · · FY2025 · National Institute of Food and Agriculture
A Carolina Center to Characterize and Maintain Mutant Mice
$1,469,749Terry R Magnuson · Univ Of North Carolina Chapel Hill · U42 · FY2020 · OD
Development of novel endolysins targeting Cutibacterium acnes to treat acne vulgaris
$1,469,201Oliver Wei Liu · Topaz Biosciences, Inc. · R44 · FY2025 · AR
A Carolina Center to Characterize and Maintain Mutant Mice
$1,466,922Terry R Magnuson · Univ Of North Carolina Chapel Hill · U42 · FY2021 · OD
Oral Microbial and Immunological Characterization of Patients with Immune Dysfun
$1,466,526Niki Moutsopoulos · National Institute Of Dental & Craniofacial Research · ZIA · FY2022 · DE
Mechanisms of Chronic Inflammation in Periodontitis
$1,466,526Niki Moutsopoulos · National Institute Of Dental & Craniofacial Research · ZIA · FY2022 · DE
CAREER: Just add water? Investigating RNA stability in desiccated soil bacteria.
$1,466,520Paul Carini · University Of Arizona · · FY2022 · BIO
Gene-Environment Interactions at the Skin Surface
$1,466,477Julia Angela Segre · National Human Genome Research Institute · ZIA · FY2020 · HG
1/2: AZithromycin Therapy in Preschoolers with a Severe Wheezing Episode Diagnosed at the Emergency Department (AZ-SWED)
$1,466,425Fernando D Martinez · University Of Arizona · UG3 · FY2020 · HL
Cultivation, Nature, Ecology and Pathogenicity of the Uncultivable Oral Microbiom
$1,465,407Floyd E Dewhirst · Ada Forsyth Institute, Inc. · R01 · FY2015 · DE