
CCNY's Ryan Williams has received $1.96 million from the NIH to develop nanomedicines. The funding is from a program that supports America's most talented and promising young investigators.
In a boost for the development of nanomedicines to study and diagnose inflammatory diseases, City College of New York biomedical engineer Ryan M. Williams is the recipient of a $1.96 million grant from the NIH鈥檚 (NIGMS).
The funding, over five years, is part of the MIRA ESI program (Maximizing Investigator's Research Award for Early Stage Investigators) that supports the nation's most highly talented and promising young investigators. Williams鈥 award is titled: 鈥淚nvestigating real-time multi-system cytokine signaling in chronic disease.鈥
鈥淭he main goals of the grant are to engineer implantable novel fluorescent nanosensors to be used as tools to study pro-inflammatory proteins (cytokines) in chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's and Parkinson鈥檚,鈥 said Williams.
An assistant professor in the City College鈥檚 Grove School of Engineering, Williams will work with his biomedical engineering colleague Steve Nicoll, whose lab is collaborating in the design of the implantable nanosensors.
Research will also take place in whose mission is to design and translate nanomedicines relating to targets in inflammatory diseases. Specifically, it is developing kidney-targeted polymeric nanoparticles as therapeutic tools for renal diseases and implantable optical nanosensor devices as diagnostic and research tools for cancer and other inflammation-driven diseases.
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