As part of the new Exposure Biology Program, the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences, a component of the National Institutes
of Health, today announced $74 million in grant opportunities for
the development of new technologies that will improve the measurement
of environmental exposures that contribute to human disease.
The three grant opportunities will support research to develop
portable, easy-to-use sensing devices that will accurately measure
personal exposure to a wide variety of chemical and biological
agents. The grants will also support the development of sensitive
biomarkers, based on subtle changes in DNA structure, proteins,
metabolites and other molecules, that will enable scientists to
study how the body responds to environmental stress.
The Exposure Biology Program is one of two complementary research
programs outlined in the Genes and Environment Initiative, a five-year,
NIH-wide effort to identify the genetic and environmental underpinnings
of asthma, diabetes, cancer, and other common illnesses. The program
will focus on the development of innovative technologies for assessing
exposures to chemical and biological agents, dietary intake, physical
activity, psychosocial stress, and addictive substances, as well
as new methods for quantifying the biological responses to these
environmental stressors.
?These new exposure technologies will enable researchers to accelerate
their discovery of genetic and environmental risk factors for human
disease,? said NIEHS Director David A. Schwartz, M.D. ?The discoveries
made with these new tools will ultimately lead to new strategies
for the prevention and treatment of many illnesses.?
There is increasing evidence that common human diseases result
from a complex interplay between genes and environmental exposures.
Population studies designed to investigate the role of gene-environment
interactions in human disease have often been hampered by the lack
of precise measurement tools for assessing a person?s exposure
to environmental agents that impact disease risk.
?The technologies used for the detection and measurement of environmental
exposures should be as precise as the measurement tools currently
used for genetic research,? said Brenda Weis, Ph.D., senior science
advisor at NIEHS and program coordinator for the Exposure Biology
Program.
The following are trans-NIH grant opportunities led by the NIEHS:
- Environmental Sensors for Personal Exposure Assessment
This announcement will support the development of field-deployable
or wearable sensing devices that provide direct measurements of
exposure to ozone, fine particles, diesel exhaust, heavy metals,
volatile organic compounds, pesticides, microbial toxins, and
other environmental agents that have been linked with respiratory
disease, cancer, and other common illnesses.
- Biological Response Indicators of Environmental Stress
This announcement will focus on the development of sensitive biomarkers
that reflect subtle changes in inflammation, oxidative damage
and other pathways that can lead to disease. By measuring the
cellular and molecular responses that are involved in disease
development, researchers will be better able to define the relationships
between the genetic and environmental components of human illness.
- Biological Response Indicators of Environmental Stress
Centers
This announcement will focus on the development of sensitive
biomarkers that reflect subtle changes in inflammation, oxidative
damage and other pathways that can lead to disease, and the incorporation
of these markers into field- and laboratory-based sensing devices.
The Exposure Biology Program also includes two other grant opportunities: Improved
Measures of Diet and Physical Activity for the Genes and Environment
Initiative, led by the National Cancer Institute and
National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, and Field-Deployable
Tools for Quantifying Exposures to Psychosocial Stress and to
Addictive Substances for Studies of Health and Disease,
led by the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
?Any individuals with the skills, knowledge and abilities required
to carry out the proposed research, including scientists who work
in NIH laboratories, are encouraged to submit an application for
participation in the program,? said Weis.
NIEHS will host an information meeting and videoconference, October
20, 2006 in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, to allow potential
applicants to obtain information and clarify any questions about
the funding opportunities. Detailed information about the meeting,
including time, location, and the new grant opportunities, is available
at the Exposure Biology Program website: www.gei.nih.gov/exposurebiology/index.asp.
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS),
a component of the National Institutes of Health, supports research
to understand the effects of the environment on human health. For
more information on environmental health topics, please visit our
website at http://www.niehs.nih.gov/.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's
Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and
Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting
and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research,
and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both
common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and
its programs, visit www.nih.gov.