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

Rice Brain Institute awards first seed grants to jump-start collaborative brain health research

2026-01-08
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON – (Jan. 8, 2026) – Diseases that disrupt memory, movement and cognition remain among the most difficult challenges in modern medicine, in part because the brain is still one of the least understood organs in the human body.

That challenge is driving new collaborations at Rice University, where the Rice Brain Institute has announced the first research awards issued under its new umbrella. The institute is funding four collaborative projects that unite Rice faculty with clinicians and scientists across the Texas Medical Center.

The Rice and TMC Neuro Collaboration Seed Grant Program marks the institute’s first funding initiative since its launch in October and reflects Rice’s strategic priority to lead innovations in health by accelerating interdisciplinary, translational research in brain science and brain health. The program is a joint effort between Rice and four TMC institutional partners, including the University of Texas Medical Branch, Baylor College of Medicine, UTHealth Houston and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

“These awards are meant to help teams test bold ideas and build the collaborations needed to sustain long-term research programs in brain health,” said Behnaam Aazhang, Rice’s J.S. Abercrombie Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Rice Brain Institute director and co-director of the Rice Neuroengineering Initiative.

Facilitated by Rice’s Educational and Research Initiatives for Collaborative Health (ENRICH) Office, the program supports pilot projects that address neurological disease, mental health and brain injury, allowing teams to test new approaches and build momentum for continued collaboration. Each award requires collaboration between at least one Rice faculty member and one investigator at a partnering TMC institution, with a unique split-funding model mechanism and proposal evaluation process that could help structure future collaborations. The number of applications for the first iteration of the program indicates a strong interest in research collaborations focused on brain health.

The first round of awards, selected from 40 proposals, supports projects that reflect the breadth of the Rice Brain Institute’s research agenda:

A longer-lasting treatment for abnormal blood vessels in the brain

This project aims to develop an injectable, gel-like material designed to seal off fragile, abnormal blood vessels that can cause life-threatening bleeding in the brain, while also delivering a targeted drug to reduce the risk that the vessels reopen.

Principal investigators: Kevin McHugh, associate professor of bioengineering and chemistry at Rice; and Peter Kan, professor and chair of neurosurgery at the UTMB.

A nonsurgical approach to controlling seizures

Researchers are testing a nonsurgical approach that uses focused ultrasound to deliver gene-based therapies to deep brain regions involved in seizures with the goal of controlling epilepsy without implanted electrodes or invasive procedures.

Principal investigators: Jerzy Szablowski, assistant professor of bioengineering at Rice; and Jochen Meyer, assistant professor of neurology at Baylor. 

A blood test to identify high-risk patients after brain hemorrhage

This project aims to create a blood test that can identify patients at high risk for delayed brain injury following aneurysm-related hemorrhage, allowing doctors to intervene earlier and improve recovery outcomes.

Principal investigators: Juliane Sempionatto, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rice; and Aaron Gusdon, associate professor of neurosurgery at UTHealth Houston.

Protecting speech and language during brain tumor surgery

By combining advanced brain recordings, imaging and noninvasive stimulation, this study seeks to help surgeons better identify and preserve language-critical brain areas during tumor removal, reducing the risk of long-term speech and language impairment.

Principal investigators: Christina Tringides, assistant professor of materials science and nanoengineering at Rice; and Sujit Prabhu, professor of neurosurgery at MD Anderson.

Together, the projects underscore the Rice Brain Institute’s role as a collaborative hub linking engineering, neuroscience and clinical expertise into closer conversation.


-30-

About Rice:

Located on a 300-acre forested campus in Houston, Texas, Rice University is consistently ranked among the nation’s top 20 universities by U.S. News & World Report. Rice has highly respected schools of architecture, business, continuing studies, engineering and computing, humanities, music, natural sciences and social sciences and is home to the Baker Institute for Public Policy. Internationally, the university maintains the Rice Global Paris Center, a hub for innovative collaboration, research and inspired teaching located in the heart of Paris. With 4,776 undergraduates and 4,104 graduate students, Rice’s undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio is just under 6-to-1. Its residential college system builds close-knit communities and lifelong friendships, just one reason why Rice is ranked No. 1 for lots of race/class interaction and No. 7 for best-run colleges by the Princeton Review. Rice is also rated as a best value among private universities by the Wall Street Journal and is included on Forbes’ exclusive list of “New Ivies.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Personalizing cancer treatments significantly improve outcome success

2026-01-08
Researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine have led the first clinical trial in the world to show that cancer drug treatments can be safely and effectively personalized based on the unique DNA of a patient’s tumor. The study results, published in the January 8, 2026 online edition of Journal of Clinical Oncology found that individualizing multi-drug treatments to each patient’s specific tumor mutations using molecular testing can significantly enhance treatment success. “Every patient and every cancer is unique, and so should how we treat for them,” said Jason Sicklick, MD, senior author of the study, professor of surgery and pharmacology ...

UW researchers analyzed which anthologized writers and books get checked out the most from Seattle Public Library

2026-01-08
Seattle Public Library, or SPL, is the only U.S. library system that makes its anonymized, granular checkout data public. Want to find out how many times people borrowed the e-book version of Toni Morrison’s “Beloved” in May 2018? That data is available.  The hitch is that the library’s data set contains nearly 50 million rows, and a single title can appear variously. Morrison’s “Beloved,” for instance, is listed as “Beloved,” “Beloved (unabridged),” “Beloved : a novel / by Toni Morrison” and so on.  To track trends in the catalogue over the last 20 years, ...

Study finds food waste compost less effective than potting mix alone

2026-01-08
By Maddie Johnson University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — With an estimated 30 to 40 percent of the United States’ food supply ending up as waste, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, food science and horticulture experts teamed up to study if it could lay the foundation for growing the next bunch of crops.  “It’s capturing food waste that would otherwise go to landfill and produce greenhouse gases and cause harm to the environment in some capacity,” said Matt Bertucci, assistant professor of sustainable fruit and vegetable ...

UCLA receives $7.3 million for wide-ranging cannabis research

2026-01-08
UCLA has received four grants totaling $7.3 million from the California Department of Cannabis Control (DCC) to support research on a broad range of topics, from the therapeutic potential of cannabinoids to the cardiovascular risks of cannabis use and strategies for addressing California's unregulated cannabis market. The funding will support research by faculty from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, the UCLA College of Letters and Science and the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.  “This ...

Why this little-known birth control option deserves more attention

2026-01-08
Self-administered injectable contraceptives have been available in the United States for more than two decades, yet a new study has found only about a quarter of reproductive health experts prescribe it — and many are unaware it’s even an option.  Researchers surveyed 422 clinicians who regularly prescribe birth control and found that only about a third of those who were aware of the option prescribe it. The providers said they were concerned about their patients’ ability to self-inject, the medication’s ...

Johns Hopkins-led team creates first map of nerve circuitry in bone, identifies key signals for bone repair

2026-01-08
When a house catches on fire, we assume that a smoke alarm inside will serve one purpose and one purpose only: warn the occupants of danger. But imagine if the device could transform into something that could fight the fire as well.  In a new study in today’s issue of Science, a multi-institutional team lead by researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine has shown in mice that the body’s “pain alarms” ― sensory neurons ― actually have such a dual function. In the event ...

UC Irvine astronomers spot largest known stream of super-heated gas in the universe

2026-01-08
UC Irvine astronomers found an unexpectedly large stream of super-heated gas at nearby galaxy. The team used NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and other observatories. Project funding was provided by NASA and the National Science Foundation. Irvine, Calif., Jan. 8, 2026 —University of California, Irvine astronomers have announced the discovery of the largest-known stream of super-heated gas in the universe ejecting from a nearby galaxy called VV 340a. They describe the discovery in Science. The super-heated gas, detected by the researchers in data provided by NASA’s ...

Research shows how immune system reacts to pig kidney transplants in living patients

2026-01-08
Pioneering research led by Brazilians describes the immune system’s reactions in detail in the first living patient to receive a genetically modified pig kidney transplant. This paves the way for the search for therapies that can prevent organ rejection. The study demonstrates the feasibility of this type of graft but indicates that controlling initial rejection alone is insufficient. This is because even with immunosuppressants, continuous activation of innate immunity – the body’s first line of defense, especially macrophages, which react to any threat – can compromise ...

Dark stars could help solve three pressing puzzles of the high-redshift universe

2026-01-08
A recent study led by Colgate Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy Cosmin Ilie, in collaboration with Jillian Paulin ’23 at the University of Pennsylvania, Andreea Petric of the Space Telescope Science Institute, and Katherine Freese of the University of Texas at Austin, provides answers to three seemingly disparate, yet pressing, cosmic dawn puzzles. Specifically, the authors show how dark stars could help explain the unexpected discovery of “blue monster” galaxies, the numerous early overmassive black hole galaxies, and the “little red dots” in images ...

Manganese gets its moment as a potential fuel cell catalyst

2026-01-08
According to a new study by researchers at Yale and the University of Missouri, chemical catalysts containing manganese — an abundant, inexpensive metallic element — proved highly effective in converting carbon dioxide into formate, a compound viewed as a potential key contributor of hydrogen for the next generation of fuel cells. The new study appears in the journal Chem. The lead authors are Yale postdoctoral researcher Justin Wedal and Missouri graduate research assistant Kyler Virtue; the senior authors are professors Nilay Hazari of Yale and Wesley Bernskoetter of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

When tropical oceans were oxygen oases

Positive interactions dominate among marine microbes, six-year study reveals

Safeguarding the Winter Olympics-Paralympics against climate change

Most would recommend RSV immunizations for older and pregnant people

Donated blood has a shelf life. A new test tracks how it's aging

Stroke during pregnancy, postpartum associated with more illness, job status later

American Meteorological Society announces new executive director

People with “binge-watching addiction” are more likely to be lonely

Wild potato follows a path to domestication in the American Southwest

General climate advocacy ad campaign received more public engagement compared to more-tailored ad campaign promoting sustainable fashion

Medical LLMs may show real-world potential in identifying individuals with major depressive disorder using WhatsApp voice note recordings

Early translational study supports the role of high-dose inhaled nitric oxide as a potential antimicrobial therapy

AI can predict preemies’ path, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

A wild potato that changed the story of agriculture in the American Southwest

Cancer’s super-enhancers may set the map for DNA breaks and repair: A key clue to why tumors become aggressive and genetically unstable

Prehistoric tool made from elephant bone is the oldest discovered in Europe

Mineralized dental plaque from the Iron Age provides insight into the diet of the Scythians

Salty facts: takeaways have more salt than labels claim

When scientists build nanoscale architecture to solve textile and pharmaceutical industry challenges

Massive cloud with metallic winds discovered orbiting mystery object

Old diseases return as settlement pushes into the Amazon rainforest

Takeaways are used to reward and console – study

Velocity gradients key to explaining large-scale magnetic field structure

Bird retinas function without oxygen – solving a centuries-old biological mystery

Pregnancy- and abortion-related mortality in the US, 2018-2021

Global burden of violence against transgender and gender-diverse adults

Generative AI use and depressive symptoms among US adults

Antibiotic therapy for uncomplicated acute appendicitis

Childhood ADHD linked to midlife physical health problems

Patients struggle to measure blood pressure at home

[Press-News.org] Rice Brain Institute awards first seed grants to jump-start collaborative brain health research