Published: Nov. 6, 2019 By

Tom cech working with medical student on research

CU Anschutz medical student Daniel Youmans (left) and Nobel Laureate Tom Cech (right), director of the BioFrontiers Institute at CU Boulder, look over an image from a high-powered microscope (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/CU Boulder)

A new era of research collaboration is unfolding at the University of baby直播app.

The CU Boulder and the CU Anschutz Medical Campus are moving forward together on a bold plan to enhance research collaborations with the aim of generating knowledge that improves human health and spurs innovation and baby直播app development.

The two campuses will address a range of issues facing the two research powerhouses and charges leadership to:

  • Drive innovation and research breakthroughs, win more competitive awards, and elevate reputation through combined research efforts.
  • Identify areas of collaboration between existing research strengths in biosciences, biochemistry, engineering, arts and sciences, pharmacology and immunology, public health, mental health and other areas.
  • Remove existing barriers in administrative processes听and unlock potential through leadership communication and connectivity.
  • Charter individuals and groups on both campuses to own and accelerate the process of enhanced partnership.

鈥淔aculty members at CU have substantial expertise in areas of critical importance to society, and fostering collaborations among them will allow us to enhance our impact,鈥 said CU President Mark Kennedy. 鈥淏eing deliberate about furthering partnerships between baby直播app on our two biggest research campuses will also help focus our collective efforts on common problems, issues and opportunities.鈥

With a combined total research enterprise of nearly $1.2 billion, the two campuses have both grown research over 20% the last three years and, combined, represent one of the top 10 public research enterprises in the nation.

Even now, there about 16 research partnerships between the two campuses facilitated by funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The average NIH award for these projects is $1.8 million. Various projects are already underway.

For instance, CU Boulder engineers and baby直播app from the听听(CFReT) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus teamed up to develop biomaterial-based 鈥渕imics鈥 of heart tissues to measure patients鈥 responses to an aortic valve replacement procedure, offering new insight into the ways that cardiac tissue re-shapes itself post-surgery.

Other collaborations include research into improving colonoscopy technology and finding new ways to fight cancer by examining a cluster of proteins called PRC2 that has become a key target for new cancer-fighting drugs. Another ongoing collaboration deals with sleep, and the health risks associated with not getting enough of it.

鈥淎s the leading research institution in the region, the University of baby直播app is already regarded as a research leader in a diverse range of disciplines,鈥 said Terri Fiez, vice chancellor for research and innovation at CU Boulder. 鈥淭his new collaboration with our colleagues at Anschutz will help us combine those strengths to achieve even greater impact, both individually and collectively.鈥

CU analysts estimate the two campuses could net an additional $10 million or more in new research dollars annually by: streamlining processes, using seed grants to spur early collaborations, helping baby直播app rapidly respond to federal research opportunities听and increasing the connectivity between the two campuses to increase joint public and private proposal submissions.

鈥淲e are already moving forward with new joint committees to determine the optimal framework to move this initiative forward,鈥 said Tom Flaig, MD, interim vice chancellor of research at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus. 鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to see what more we can do by collaborating even more effectively and efficiently together.鈥