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  • Salinas Selected as Finalist for ASN Nutrition 2020

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    Michael Salinas has been named an Emerging Leaders in Nutrition Science Finalist, and a Graduate Student Research Award Finalist, a program of the American Society for Nutrition (ASN) to recognize the highest quality research presented by students and young investigators at NUTRITION 2020 LIVE ONLINE.

    More than 1,000 abstracts were submitted by students and postdoctoral fellows and the Emerging Leaders in Nutrition Science program aims to recognize the top 15% highest scoring abstracts as finalists.  Abstracts were rated by more than 500 nutrition scientists.

    Mr. Salinas’s abstract for NUTRITION 2020 LIVE ONLINE is titled
    High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity Modulates Colonic Lgr5+ Stem Cell Homeostasis by Dysregulating Plasma Membrane Organization.

    “Through this activity, the American Society for Nutrition celebrates the achievements of our rising stars,” stated Richard Mattes, PhD, MPH, RD, President, American Society for Nutrition.   “The Society looks forward to watching their future contributions to advance our understanding of nutrition science and practice.”

    For a full list of Emerging Leaders in Nutrition Science Finalists, visit https://meeting.nutrition.org/2020awards/#abstract2020.

  • John Kyung Ho Jung to receive graduation honors

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    Kyung Ho Jung

    John Jung from the Chapkin Lab has fulfilled all requirements for the 2019-2020 Undergraduate Research Scholar (URS) thesis program. After graduation from Texas A&M University, John will be recognized as an Undergraduate Research Scholar on his official transcript. John will also receive an Undergraduate Research Scholars medallion to wear as graduation regalia.

    In the lab, John used both confocal imaging and imaging flow cytometry to show that disruption of adiponectin signaling by knocking out / deleting either individual or both adiponectin receptors (AR) in HAP1 isogenic cell lines, modifies the order/fluidity of the plasma membrane. These findings are noteworthy because they may in part explain how adiponectin reduces cancer risk.

  • Hagler Fellow Induction

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    Pictured right to left: (Dr. Chapkin, Dr. Donovan, Don Wallace, Dr. Davidson)

    Dr. Sharon Donovan, Professor and Melissa M. Noel Endowed Chair in Nutrition and Health, Department of Nutritional Sciences, College of Agricultural, Consumer & Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has been awarded a Hagler Fellowship at Texas A&M University. Dr. Donovan’s laboratory conducts research in pediatric nutrition, focusing on optimizing neonatal intestinal and gut microbial development with respect tocognition and the reduction of childhood obesity.

    The Chapkin lab along with Dr. Donovan and collaborators (Dr. Ivan Ivanov, Dr. Irina Gaynanova, and Dr. Grace Yoon) will systematically integrate genomic data from both the infant (host mucosa) and gut microbiota in order to define host-microbe gene-diet interactions within the context of the structure and functionality of gut microbial communities

  • AICR Interview with Chapkin on AhR Microbes

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    Under the Microscope: AhR Microbes Holding the Keys to Your Gut Health?

    “It’s really very predominantly a nutritional story,” says Texas A&M’s Dr. Robert Chapkin, describing one of his current passions — the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) signaling system that exists in every cell. It works like a lock and key. When natural keys, or ligands, get inserted into receptors, the doors open to an array of health-promoting activities. Read Full Interview Here

  • New NIH Grants

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    Some recent good fortune for the Chapkin Lab in the past few months.  We are pleased to report that a new NIH R21CA245456 grant “Diet and the colonic exfoliome: A novel, non-invasive approach to testing interventions in humans”, which leverages our novel non-invasive transcriptomics (exfoliomics) platform in relation to humans fed a chemoprotective diet, was funded in January, 2020.

    The second piece of good new relates to the validation of our groundbreaking work on a membrane therapeutics approach to target cancer stem cells.  Our NIH RO1 CA244359 grant, “Targeting plasma membrane spatial dynamics to suppress aberrant Wnt signaling” will also be funded. It received a priority score = 11, placing it in the 1st percentile!  I believe that these efforts reflect the best work generated by the Chapkin lab to date, and we anticipate that our seminal discoveries in cancer biology, computational biology, disease prediction, and single cell analyses, will be highly cited in the years to come.