(Press-News.org) BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Mary-Ann Bjornsti, Ph.D., professor and former chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, begins her term July 1 as president of the largest coalition of biological and biomedical research associations in the United States, the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, also known as FASEB.
Bjornsti, the Newman H. Waters Chair of Clinical Pharmacology, has served as associate director for Translational Research at the O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center at UAB. Her research interests are in the mechanisms of anti-cancer drug action and the pathways that regulate tumor growth and cellular responses to replicative stress.
FASEB, located near the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, is one of the most powerful forces for science in America. It is composed of 26 societies with more than 110,000 researchers worldwide. FASEB promotes research through collaborative advocacy as the voice for the basic biomedical research community. Each year, FASEB assesses the needs of that community and makes budget recommendations to Congress in support of the federal agencies that are tasked with securing America’s health and well-being.
FASEB also offers opinions to Congress on potential legislation, budget allocations and regulations regarding the practice of science, and it shares insights with federal agencies regarding policies that impact biomedical research.
“I am honored to take on this expanded role in FASEB,” Bjornsti said. “I look forward to working with a dedicated team of leaders and staff to leverage their talents, expertise and energy to carry out our mission to advance health and well-being by promoting research and education in the biological and biomedical sciences.”
Bjornsti stepped down as Pharmacology and Toxicology chair at the end of 2022 to focus on her ongoing research interests, mentorship opportunities, her leadership role within the O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center and her FASEB responsibilities.
Bjornsti has been an active member of FASEB for several years, having served as president-elect in 2022-23, vice president for Science Policy in 2021-22 and vice president-elect for Science Policy in 2020-21. She is also a member of three FASEB member societies: the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, the Genetics Society of America, and the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.
At UAB, Pharmacology and Toxicology is a department in the Marnix E. Heersink School of Medicine.
END
Bjornsti begins her term as president of FASEB
FASEB is the largest coalition of biological and biomedical research associations in the United States and advocates for basic biomedical research.
2023-06-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Population Council joins feminist partners to advance gender equality and equity at Women Deliver 2023
2023-06-28
June 28, 2023—Population Council experts and our partners at Women Deliver (WD2023) in Kigali, Rwanda will share how we can collectively build evidence-based solutions to achieve gender equality and equity. The Council will lead the Girls Deliver: Pre-Conference on Adolescent Girls and key high-profile events on the sidelines of WD2030 to advance global discourse of the linkages between gender equality with pressing issues such as adolescents, education, and climate.
“The Council is thrilled to collaborate with youth, global activist, feminist, political, and research leaders to cultivate an ecosystem ...
New drug application doubles rates of remission in patients with Ulcerative Colitis
2023-06-28
A new drug, investigated by Amsterdam UMC together with colleagues around the world, is effective as a treatment against ulcerative colitis. With the clinical trial demonstrating a doubling in the rates of remission, to up to 50%, in certain groups. The results of this clinical trial are, today, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Around the world, it is estimated that millions live with ulcerative colitis, a condition that is only growing in prevalence. Geert D’Haens, lead author and Professor of Gastroenterology at Amsterdam UMC, says “there is still a high unmet need for safe and effective treatments for ulcerative colitis. This new medicine meets this ...
New approach in cancer therapy with innovative mechanism-of-action for ferroptosis induction
2023-06-28
A team of researchers led by Dr. Marcus Conrad from Helmholtz Munich discovered a novel anti-cancer drug, called icFSP1, which sensitizes cancer cells to ferroptosis. Ferroptosis is characterized by the iron-dependent oxidative destruction of cellular membranes, which is counteracted by ferroptosis suppressor protein-1 (FSP1), one of the guardians of ferroptosis. Although FSP1 has been considered as an attractive drug target for cancer therapy, in vivo efficacious FSP1 inhibitors have been lacking. To this end, the team carefully evaluated hits from a screen of around ten thousand small molecule compounds and identified icFSP1 as a new in vivo effective drug. Importantly, the team ...
Neutrons look inside working solid-state battery to discover its key to success
2023-06-28
Neutrons look inside working solid-state battery to discover its key to success
Researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory were the first to use neutron reflectometry to peer inside a working solid-state battery and monitor its electrochemistry. They discovered that its excellent performance results from an extremely thin layer, across which charged lithium atoms quickly flow as they move from anode to cathode and blend into a solid electrolyte.
“We want better batteries,” said ORNL’s Andrew Westover, who co-led a study published in ACS Energy Letters with James Browning at the lab’s Spallation Neutron ...
Acutely exposed to changing climate, many Greenlanders do not blame humans
2023-06-28
A new survey shows that the largely Indigenous population of Greenland is highly aware that the climate is changing, and far more likely than people in other Arctic nations to say they are personally affected. Yet, many do not blame human influences—especially those living traditional subsistence lifestyles most directly hit by the impacts of rapidly wasting ice and radical changes in weather. The study appears this week in the journal Nature Climate Change.
"Greenland is off the charts when it comes to the proportion of people who are seeing and personally experiencing the effects of climate change. But there is a big mismatch between ...
AnalySwift receives nearly $800,000 NASA contract to improve simulation of next-generation composites
2023-06-28
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – NASA has awarded a $799,954 Phase II STTR contract to AnalySwift LLC, a Purdue University-affiliated commercial software provider. The company will develop DATC, or Design tool for Advanced Tailorable Composites, and launch it at the end of the two-year contract.
Allan Wood, AnalySwift president and CEO, said advancements in simulation capabilities have not always kept pace with those in manufacturing techniques. He said DATC will significantly improve NASA’s capabilities to design and analyze aerospace structures made from advanced tailorable composites.
“DATC will be used to design next-generation aerospace structures, such as hybrid/blended ...
Gene editing: New study reveals shifting public sentiment
2023-06-28
Gene editing and genetically modified organisms (GMOs) have been topics of significant debate in recent years. A new study from the Alliance for Science, an initiative based at the Boyce Thompson Institute, has revealed a positive shift in public sentiment towards one aspect of agricultural biotechnology, showing that gene editing consistently receives higher favorability ratings than GMOs in both social and traditional English-language media.
The study was published after analyzing data from a five-year period between January 2018 and December 2022. The data provides valuable insights for the scientific community and professionals in science communication.
"Our ...
Brain scans reveal that lonely people process the world in unique ways
2023-06-28
The Russian writer and philosopher Leo Tolstoy may have been onto something when he wrote the opening line of Anna Karenina: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”
A recent study published in Psychological Science and led by a scholar now at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, suggests that when it comes to their brains processing information, people who are not lonely are all alike, but every lonely person processes the world in their own, idiosyncratic way.
Copious research shows that loneliness is detrimental to well-being ...
What controls the pathways of the Labrador Current?
2023-06-28
Changes to the flow of the Labrador Current along the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador to Nova Scotia are leading to sudden warmings or drops in the oxygen levels of the waters in several regions including the St. Lawrence Gulf and Estuary. This change has dire consequences for marine ecosystems and fisheries. To better predict what could happen in the future, researchers from McGill University set out to answer the question: what controls the pathway of the Labrador Current?
The Labrador Current supplies cold, oxygen rich waters
The Labrador Current is a cold water current in the North Atlantic Ocean that flows south along the coast of Newfoundland ...
Among professional fighters, new criteria can identify who may develop CTE
2023-06-28
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 2023
MINNEAPOLIS – Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a degenerative brain disease linked to repeated head impacts that athletes get from contact sports. However, the definitive diagnosis of the disease can be made only after death through an autopsy.
New research criteria for identifying who may be more likely to develop the disease proved accurate in distinguishing a group who would have changes in brain volume and cognitive skills years later, according to a study published in the June 28, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Video consultations are faster, cheaper and more sustainable for patients
Neuroscience drives new wellbeing app
MOVEO project kicks off in Málaga to shape the future of smarter, smoother mobility across Europe
Are the rest of podcasters history? AI-generated podcasts open new doors to make science accessible
Two frontiers: Illinois experts combine forces to develop novel nanopore sensing platform
Biotechnology governance entreaties released, echoing legacy of 1975 recombinant DNA guidelines
Review of active distribution network reconfiguration: Past progress and future directions
Revealing the lives of planet-forming disks
What’s really in our food? A global look at food composition databases and the gaps we need to fix
Racial differences in tumor collagen structure may impact cancer prognosis
Museomics highlights the importance of scientific museum collections
Fossil corals point to possibly steeper sea level rise under a warming world
The quantum mechanics of chiral spin selectivity
Bodybuilding in ancient times: How the sea anemone got its back
Science and innovation for a sustainable future
Strange radio pulses detected coming from ice in Antarctica
Amazon trees under pressure: New study reveals how forest giants handle light and heat
Cell-depleting treatment in severe RMD: New data
Vasodilation in systemic sclerosis
New ideas in gout management
Risk factors for progression in spondyloarthritis
Patient experiences In JIA
Patient organizations: The partner by your side
Nurses: A critical role for people with RMD
Online information for patients needs guidance
The many ways that AI enters rheumatology
Pregnancy outcomes in autoinflammatory disease
The value of physical activity for people with RMD
First data from the EULAR RheumaFacts project
Research spotlight: Preventing stalling to improve CAR-T cells’ efficacy against tumors
[Press-News.org] Bjornsti begins her term as president of FASEBFASEB is the largest coalition of biological and biomedical research associations in the United States and advocates for basic biomedical research.