Difference: GrantsAwarded (14 vs. 15)

Revision 1503 Jul 2006 - Main.DavidCowburn

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Update of Jul 3 006
  • NEW YORK - - Dinshaw J. Patel of the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research is the recipient of a $351,600 NIH grant to research sirna-mediated silencing of viral infection & viral suppressors of RNA silencing.
  • NEW YORK — Seth A. Darst of The Rockefeller University is the recipient of a $330,000 NIH grant for the upgrade of in-house x-ray diffraction equipment.
  • NEW YORK — Stevan R. Hubbard of New York University is the recipient of a $325,458 NIH grant for structure-function studies of the receptor tyrosine kinase musk.
  • NEW YORK — Jonathan M. Backer of Yeshiva University is the recipient of a $305,655 NIH grant for regulation and function of hvps34 in insulin signaling.
  • NEW YORK — Dinshaw J. Patel of the Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research is the recipient of a $237,850 NIH grant to research molecular basis of glycosphingolipid binding specificity.
  • STONY BROOK — Nicole S. Sampson of Stony Brook University is the recipient of a $220,222 NIH grant to research mtb-catalyzed cholesterol oxidation as virulence factor.
 Update of May 1 2006
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  • NEW YORK — Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia of CUNY City College is the recipient of a $115,133 NSF grant to study biochemical and structural characterization of intramembrane proteases.
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  • NEW YORK — Iban Ubarretxena-Belandia of CUNY City College is the recipient of a $115,133 NSF grant to study biochemical and structural characterization of intramembrane proteases.
 Update of Feb 6 2006
  • NEW YORK — Alexej Jerschow of New York University is the recipient of a $110,500 NSF grant for radiationless magnetic resonance imaging.
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  • NEW YORK — Stevan R. Hubbard of the New York University School of Medicine is the recipient of a $325,458 NIH grant for structure-function studies of the receptor tyrosine kinase MuSK.
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  • NEW YORK — Stevan R. Hubbard of the New York University School of Medicine is the recipient of a $325,458 NIH grant for structure-function studies of the receptor tyrosine kinaseMuSK.
 Update of Nov 1 2005
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  • NEW YORK — Daneng Wang of New York University is the recipient of a $232,375 NIH grant to research the crystallization of neurotransmitter transporter homologs.
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  • NEW YORK — Daneng Wang of New York University is the recipient of a $232,375 NIH grant to research the crystallization of neurotransmitter transporter homologs.
 
  • NEW YORK — John Hunt of Columbia University is the recipient of a $221,375 NIH grant to develop a chemical genetics approach to improved expression in E. coli.
Update of June 1, 2005
  • STONY BROOK - Clare Grey of SUNY Stony Brook is the recipient of a $137,000 NSF grant for Solid State NMR Studies of Disordered Solids.
  • NEW YORK — Seth Darst of The Rockefeller University is the recipient of a $346,108 NIH grant to research the structure/function of the bacterial TRCF.

Update of Apr 30, 2005

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  • STONY BROOK — Nicole Sampson of SUNY Stony Brook is the recipient of a $270,300 NIH grant for the acquisition of a spectrometer.
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  • STONY BROOK — Nicole Sampson of SUNY Stony Brook is the recipient of a $270,300 NIH grant for the acquisition of a spectrometer.
 
  • NEW YORK — Ming Ming Zhou of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine is the recipient of a $279,250 NIH grant for an automatic liquid handling system.
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  • NEW YORK - David Cowburn of NYSBC is the recipient of a $335,988 NIH grant for structural biology of Protein Kinases.
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  • NEW YORK - David Cowburn of NYSBC is the recipient of a $335,988 NIH grant for structural biology of Protein Kinases.
 Update of Mar 7, 2005
  • NEW YORK — Srinivasravi Iyengar of the Mount Sinai School Of Medicine is the recipient of a $343,238 NIH grant for modeling cell regulatory networks.
  • NEW YORK — Xiangpeng Kong of the New York University School Of Medicine is the recipient of a $363,350 NIH grant to research the structures of priming and recombination complexes.
  • ALBANY — Alexander Drohat of the Wadsworth Center is the recipient of a $213,735 NIH grant to research the structure and mechanism of CPG specific DNA glycosylases
Update of Feb 1, 2005
  • NEW YORK — Nicholas Geacintov of New York University is the recipient of a $300,298 NIH grant to research isomeric estrogen-DNA adducts: structure and repair
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