PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

$50 million raised for UVA's Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology

2025-06-26
(Press-News.org)

UVA Health has received two anonymous $25 million estate gifts to support the University of Virginia’s Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology. The $50 million of additional support for the institute enabled UVA Health to top its $1 billion fundraising goal in UVA’s Honor the Future campaign, which concludes this month. 

“I’m deeply grateful for the generosity and vision of these donors, whose contributions will help us to realize the full potential of the Manning Institute, and for everyone who has helped UVA Health reach this milestone,” said UVA President Jim Ryan. “These extraordinary gifts will support the Manning Institute’s research and aid in developing new treatments for hard-to-treat or incurable diseases, which will change lives across the Commonwealth and beyond.”

A four-story, 350,000-square-foot facility that will house the Manning Institute is already under construction in Fontaine Research Park. Once complete, this state-of-the-art biomedical research, development and manufacturing facility will support the institute’s mission of generating new treatments and cures for the most challenging medical conditions, to the benefit of patients everywhere. The institute is expected to cultivate an ecosystem of biotechnology innovation in Central Virginia and drive economic growth across the Commonwealth. These efforts will be complemented by a statewide clinical trials network that will expand access to potential new treatments as they are developed and tested.

The Manning Institute was kickstarted in 2023 with a $100 million lead gift from its namesakes, philanthropists Paul and Diane Manning, which was followed by significant investments of $100 million from the Commonwealth and $150 million from UVA. The two estate gifts add to the institute’s momentum.

“I am so thankful for these two generous gifts, which build on the incredible support we have received from Paul and Diane Manning, state leaders and the University to launch the institute,” said Mark T. Esser, PhD, chief scientific officer and head of the Manning Institute. “UVA Health’s mission is to transform health and inspire hope, and these donations will enable us to be at the forefront of that transformative work for the health system.”

More than 52,000 donors have given to the Honor the Future campaign to support UVA Health’s patient care, research, education and community outreach missions. Together, these donors are helping the organization fulfill the goals of its 10-year strategic plan, an extension of the University’s Great and Good plan.

“Everyone at UVA Health is deeply appreciative for all the support we have received through the Honor the Future campaign,” said Mitchell H. Rosner, MD, UVA’s interim executive vice president for health affairs. “These donations are vital to our continued ability to support the incredible work that happens here every day to serve the residents of Virginia and beyond.”

The Honor the Future campaign is the largest in UVA’s history. It was launched publicly in October 2019 to coincide with the bicentennial of the University’s founding. More than $6 billion has been raised across UVA’s schools and units, exceeding a record-breaking $5 billion goal for the campaign, which officially ends June 30.

“Achieving this record-breaking fundraising milestone for UVA Health reflects the generosity of many alumni, grateful patients, community members and visionary philanthropists. We are beyond grateful for their confidence and support, which have positioned UVA Health to continue providing outstanding clinical care, advancing research, providing a top-tier medical and nursing education and improving the health and well-being of patients and families in our community long into the future,” said Ken Botsford, MD, the Honor the Future campaign’s vice chair for health who is a 1975 graduate of the College of Arts & Sciences and a 1979 graduate of the School of Medicine. “The success of this campaign is a testament to the physicians, nurses, researchers, faculty and UVA Health staff whose dedication and exceptionalism inspired these contributions.” 

Supporting Patient Care

Recent philanthropic investments in patient-care programs and facilities include support for: 

The opening of UVA Health Children's Pediatric Neurodevelopmental and Behavioral Health clinicto provide comprehensive, interdisciplinary care for children’s mental, developmental and behavioral health needs. The expansion of UVA Health Children’s neonatal and pediatric intensive care units to ensure the region’s youngest and sickest patients have access to lifesaving critical care and the most advanced medical technology close to home. UVA Health’s new national program specializing in comprehensive care for Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and other hypermobility disorders, a difficult-to-diagnose collection of connective tissue disorders that cause pain and medical issues throughout the body. Upgrading and expanding the mother-baby unit within the Hylton Women’s and Children’s Center at UVA Health Prince William Medical Center to increase its capacity for world-class labor and delivery care and provide the latest innovations in care for families in Northern Virginia.

Investing in Breakthrough Research

Recent major gifts to UVA Health’s research program include:

A $30 million gift from the Harrison and Mary Anderson Harrison Foundations to launch the Harrison Family Translational Research Center in Alzheimer’s and Neurodegenerative Diseases. This interdisciplinary research hub within the Manning Institute is bringing together leading neuroscientists and clinicians to develop new ways of diagnosing and treating Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease and other devastating neurological conditions. A gift of more than $10 million from an anonymous donor for the Translational Orphan Blood Cancer Research Initiative, which focuses on new treatments and cures for leukemias, lymphomas and myelomas, including the rarest and most complex types of these diseases. Millions in seed funding for research targeting the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of solid tumor cancers, including diseases of the prostate, pancreas, breast, skin, brain, ovaries and more. 

Bolstering Education

Private support for UVA Health’s educational mission includes:

$135 million for medical and nursing school scholarships to ensure UVA Health continues to attract and support the most talented future physicians, nurses, scientists and healthcare leaders.  12 new endowed professorships to help UVA Health recruit and retain top-notch medical and nursing school faculty to provide the highest-quality patient care, conduct groundbreaking research and train the next generation of healthcare experts and pioneers. A founding endowment for UVA Health’s Leadership Institute, part of efforts to make UVA Health the best place to work by nurturing leaders within the organization.

Serving Communities

Philanthropic contributions to the community outreach mission include support for:

The purchase of a state-of-the-art mobile health vehicle and community-based clinics in Charlottesville to increase healthcare access. Free healthcare screenings, health education programs, food insecurity programs and patient assistance funds in collaboration with community organizations and other partners. Earn While You Learn and other career-development programs to build a robust healthcare workforce pipeline across the state. END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

From hydration layers to nanoarchitectures: Water’s pivotal role in peptide organization on 2D nanomaterials

2025-06-26
Researchers at the Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa University, report in Small, a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering nanotechnology, published by Wiley-WCH, Germany, how short peptides self-assemble linearly on atomically-thick solid surfaces, such as graphite and MoS2. The research addresses a longstanding challenge in materials science: understanding the complex, sequence-specific interactions between peptides and solid substrates, and the critical role of local hydration ...

Discovery of reduced α-synuclein in red blood cells of patients with dementia with lewy bodies

2025-06-26
A research team led by Associate Professor Ayako Okado-Matsumoto from the Department of Biology at Toho University has made a significant finding that sheds new light on Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). This study was conducted in collaboration with Professor Ryuji Sakakibara from the Department of Neurology at Sakura Medical Center, and Professors Hitoshi Nukada and Soroku Yagihashi from the Department of Exploratory Medicine on Nature, Life and Man at Toho University. The team discovered a notable change in a specific protein found in the blood of patients with DLB. Their research revealed that individuals with DLB ...

New system uses sound and terahertz waves to measure blood sodium without needles

2025-06-26
WASHINGTON — In a new study, researchers demonstrated long-term, non-invasive monitoring of blood sodium levels using a system that combines optoacoustic detection with terahertz spectroscopy. Accurate measurement of blood sodium is essential for diagnosing and managing conditions such as dehydration, kidney disease and certain neurological and endocrine disorders. Terahertz radiation, which falls between microwaves and the mid-infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum, is ideal for biological applications because it is low-energy and non-harmful to tissues, ...

IEEE study reveal the physics of laser emission from Mamyshev oscillator

2025-06-26
The Mamyshev oscillator (MO) is a type of fiber laser capable of producing high-energy laser pulses at a tunable repetition rate. It is a mode-locked laser which uses light travelling within a closed-loop cavity to produce laser emission. Harmonic mode-locking (HML) is an  advanced form of mode-locking process where multiple laser pulses are produced within one round trip of light. MOs employing HML are used for several advanced applications such as optical communication, frequency metrology, and micromachining. Despite increasing applications of HML MOs, understanding the light buildup dynamics of HML within these lasers ...

CHEST launches critical care APP education and certification

2025-06-26
GLENVIEW, IL – First announced earlier this year, the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) educational program and formal certification exam for advanced practice providers (APPs), including nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants/associates (PAs), in critical care is now available. The CHEST Critical Care APP (CCAPP) Certification Exam was created using a rigorous and data-driven approach aligning with professional certification standards to determine the 11 topic areas on the exam. Questions focus on foundational areas for practicing critical care that are meaningful across ...

Kelp-eating microalgae offer huge potential

2025-06-26
Diatoms are some of the most common algae found in the ocean. There are at least 100,000 species. Most of these tiny diatoms use photosynthesis. This means that they use sunlight, carbon dioxide and water to produce the sugar and energy they need to grow, live and reproduce. However, some diatoms are different, such as the one with the not very catchy name of Nitzschia sing1. “These algae have stopped photosynthesising and started living off kelp,” explained Finn L. Aachmann, Professor at the Department of Biotechnology and Food Science at the Norwegian University ...

Study challenges climate change's link to our wild winter jet stream

2025-06-26
A new study challenges the idea that climate change is behind the recent erratic behavior of the polar jet stream, the massive current of Arctic air that regulates weather for much of the Northern Hemisphere. Large waves in the jet stream observed since the 1990s have, in recent years, driven abnormally frigid temperatures and devastating winter storms deep into regions such as the southern United States. Scientists fear that a warming atmosphere brought on by climate change is fueling these wild undulations, causing long troughs of bitter-cold air to drop down from the Arctic. But Dartmouth researchers report in AGU Advances ...

Study shows controlled burns can reduce wildfire intensity and smoke pollution

2025-06-26
As wildfires increasingly threaten lives, landscapes, and air quality across the U.S., a Stanford-led study published in AGU Advances June 26 finds that prescribed burns can help reduce risks. The research reveals that prescribed burns can reduce the severity of subsequent wildfires by an average of 16% and net smoke pollution by an average of 14%. “Prescribed fire is often promoted as a promising tool in theory to dampen wildfire impacts, but we show clear empirical evidence that prescribed burning works in practice,” ...

FAU Harbor Branch receives grant from Chef José Andrés’ Longer Tables Fund for queen conch lab aquaculture expansion

2025-06-26
Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute was awarded a grant by the Longer Tables Fund to develop a community-based aquaculture facility for conservation and restoration of the queen conch on the island of Eleuthera in The Bahamas. Through a strategic partnership with The Island School’s Cape Eleuthera Institute (CEI), the Queen Conch Conservancy: A Community-Based Aquaculture Restoration Project will address the needs to ensure longevity of the species. Launched by Chef José Andrés with support from the Bezos Courage and Civility Award, the Longer Tables Fund invests in innovative solutions that ...

AERA selects James A. Banks to deliver 2025 Brown Lecture in Education Research

2025-06-26
Washington, D.C., June 26, 2025—James A. Banks, the Kerry and Linda Killinger Endowed Chair in Diversity Studies Emeritus and founding director of the Center for Multicultural Education (now the Banks Center for Educational Justice) at the University of Washington, has been selected by the American Educational Research Association (AERA) to present the 2025 Brown Lecture in Education Research. The public lecture will take place on Thursday, October 23, at 6:00 p.m. ET. Complimentary registration for the livestream will open in July on the AERA website. Often called the “father of multicultural education,” ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Deeper sleep is more likely to lead to eureka moments

Hadean-age rocks preserved in the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt, Canada

Novel “digital fossil-mining” approach uncovers hidden fossils, revealing squids’ ancient origins

Review: New framework needed to assess complex “cascading” natural hazards

Flipping an evolutionarily disabled switch unlocks ear tissue regeneration in mice

Ancient squids dominated the ocean 100 million years ago

Public attitudes around solar geoengineering become less politically partisan with more familiarity

COVID-19 pandemic significantly eroded American public’s trust in US public health institutions like the CDC, shows longitudinal assessment from 2020-2024

Extreme droughts in LMICs are associated with increased sexual violence against girls and young women

Scientists capture slow-motion earthquake in action

When ideas travel further than people

British ash woodland is evolving resistance to ash dieback

Aileen Anderson named vice chancellor for research at UC Irvine

MD Anderson Research Highlights for June 26, 2025

Optica Quantum June 2025 issue press tip sheet

New study identifies brain networks underlying psychopathy

A nutritional epigenetics study protocol indicates changes in prenatal ultra-processed food intake may reduce lead and mercury exposures to prevent autism and ADHD

Knowledge Unlatched finds a new home with Annual Reviews

Feeling mental exhaustion? These two areas of the brain may control whether people give up or persevere

Genomes from people across modern-day India shed light on 50,000 years of evolutionary history

Muscle in space sheds light on ageing-related muscle loss

Availability of medications for opioid use disorder in opioid treatment programs

Receipt of buprenorphine and naltrexone for opioid use disorder by race and ethnicity and insurance type

Scientists complete the most thorough analysis yet of India's genetic diversity

$50 million raised for UVA's Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology

From hydration layers to nanoarchitectures: Water’s pivotal role in peptide organization on 2D nanomaterials

Discovery of reduced α-synuclein in red blood cells of patients with dementia with lewy bodies

New system uses sound and terahertz waves to measure blood sodium without needles

IEEE study reveal the physics of laser emission from Mamyshev oscillator

CHEST launches critical care APP education and certification

[Press-News.org] $50 million raised for UVA's Paul and Diane Manning Institute of Biotechnology