4 funding opportunities found in this category. 

Call for Nominations: Gary Neil Prize for Innovation in Drug Development
American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
All Regions
06/27/2013
$2,500

Call for Nominations: Gary Neil Prize for Innovation in Drug Development

The Gary Neil Prize for Innovation in Drug Development was established in 2004 to honor the memory of Gary Neil, Ph.D. Dr. Neil, a former leader of worldwide Research and Development at Wyeth-Ayerst, was a pioneer in the field of drug development. Dr. Neil was instrumental in creating a highly effective drug development and strategic decision-making structure at Alza through his roles as CEO and President of Therapeutic Discovery Corporation and Crescendo Pharmaceuticals Corporation. Dr. Neil had a significant role as a member of the boards of directors of Pharsight Corporation, Geron Corporation, Calydon and several other biotech companies.

The goal of the Gary Neil Prize for Innovation in Drug Development is to stimulate the application of innovative science to clinical drug development by recognizing outstanding individuals or teams who have been leaders in this area.

Eligibility

Individuals as well as teams who have demonstrated leadership in the application of significant, innovative science to clinical drug development. The award is open to individuals from all clinical pharmacology employment sectors.

Prize and Presentation

The Gary Neil Prize for Innovation in Drug Development will be presented at the ASCPT Annual Meeting. The recipient will receive a plaque and a $2,500 honorarium. Travel expenses, hotel expenses and meeting registration will be reimbursed by the Society.

The nomination deadline is Thursday, June 27, 2013.

To submit a nomination, please complete the online nomination form. Please send CVs, letters of support, and other supporting documents to ASCPT at meetings@ascpt.org

Physician Researcher, Pharmacologist
Biomedical Engineering Society Diversity Award
Biomedical Engineering Society
All Regions
05/31/2013
$2,000

Biomedical Engineering Society Diversity Award

The BMES Diversity Award honors an individual, project, organization, or institution for outstanding contributions to improving gender and racial diversity in biomedical engineering. The award is given for a broad range of activities, including research, education, and service that improves diversity in biomedical engineering industry and/or academia. The award seeks to recognize lifetime achievements as well as innovative and/or high impact activities.

The awardee or a representative of the project, organization, or institution will deliver a plenary lecture at the BMES Annual Meeting and publish the text of the lecture in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering. An important purpose of the lecture is to offer a vision of the challenges and opportunities to achieving greater diversity in biomedical engineering.

Conditions:

A nomination letter is required, (PDF Format submission will be accepted), which should address the following:

- What are the objectives of the nominee’s work?
- Provide examples of how the work conforms to and supports the goals of increasing diversity in biomedical engineering.
- Provide a detailed description of the nominee’s work.
- Describe the community served by the work including background/history and evolution if appropriate.
- What has been the impact of the work?
- What are the nominee’s plans to continue the work?

The nomination letter must be from a BMES member in good standing; however, nominees need not be BMES members. Self-nominations from BMES members are strongly encouraged.

The awardee or a representative from the project, organization, or institution is expected to accept the award in person at the BMES Annual Meeting. 

This award consists of $1,000 check, a plaque, a complimentary registration for the BMES Annual Meeting, and travel expenses up to $1,000.

Email your submission including nomination form, CV/Resumeal letters of support by May 31st to regina@bmes.org.

Biomedical Engineer
Biomedical Engineering Society Distinguished Achievement Award
Biomedical Engineering Society
All Regions
05/31/2013
$2,000

Biomedical Engineering Society Distinguished Achievement Award

The BMES Distinguished Achievement Award (formerly the BMES/ BME International Award) is awarded each year to an individual, a company, charitable foundation, or non-academic institutions that have made great contributions to the field of biomedical engineering to recognize and honor such organization.  The President, CEO or Founder of the recognized organization is expected to deliver a plenary lecture at the BMES Annual Meeting and to publish the text of the lecture in the Annals of Biomedical Engineering.  An important purpose of the lecture is to offer a vision of the challenges and opportunities in biomedical engineering.

Conditions:

It has been an expressed desire of the of the Lee family that this award be used mostly to recognize biomedical engineers from non-academic institutions.

Application form, nominee’s curriculum vitae, resume or a short bio,  letter (s) of support not to exceed 5 letters.

The contributions of the awardee do not need to precede the award date by any specific period of time.

The Awards Committee will screen the nominations, critically evaluate the nominees’ records, and submit a rank ordered list of the top nominees to the BMES President.  The President will select the awardee.

Applicants must be BMES member in good standing.

The award will consist of a plaque, a complimentary registration for the annual meeting, a check of $1,000, and up to $1,000 to assist with travel expenses.

Submit the nomination with a letters describing the nominee's service to biomedical engineering; Nominee's Short Bio, Resume or CV, all submission must be electronic. Email your nomination to regina@bmes.org.  Submission deadline is May 31st.

Technologist, Biomedical Engineer
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research Target Validation Program Fall 2013 Review Cycle
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research
All Regions
05/29/2013
$250,000

Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research Target Validation Program Fall 2013 Review Cycle

Part of our annual Edmond J. Safra Core Programs for PD Research, the Target Validation program supports work seeking to determine if manipulating a novel biological target has impact in a Parkinson’s disease (PD)-relevant animal model—an essential early step to the development of potentially promising therapies.

Fall 2013 Review Cycle

Informational Conference Call*: March 27, 2013 at 12pm US ET
Pre-proposals Due: May 29, 2013 – 6pm US ET
Full Proposal Invitations: June 19, 2013
Full Proposals Due (by invite only): August 7, 2013 – 6pm US ET
Anticipated Award Announcement: October 2013
Anticipated Funding: November 2013

*MJFF will hold a 45-minute conference call on the dates and times listed above to clarify and explain the goals of this funding initiative and answer applicant questions. To participate in the call and receive call-in details, please RSVP via email to conferencecalls@michaeljfox.org.

BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE
Research into the etiology and pathophysiology of PD has identified an increasing number of genetic and cellular targets where therapeutic intervention could benefit people with PD., including:

Epidemiological studies that have identified both protective and risk factors for PD.

Genetic studies that have implicated candidate genes whose protein products may underlie PD pathogenesis.

Biochemical studies from cellular and whole organism model systems that point to biological pathways important in PD etiology and pathogenesis, as well as examination of cell death and trophic factor signaling pathways that have pointed to potential protective targets.

Emerging understanding of dopamine neuronal development and maintenance in adulthood that has provided potential targets to restore/protect dopaminergic function in PD patients.

Improved understanding of the neurochemistry and neurophysiology of the basal ganglia and related neuronal circuits that have suggested ways to alter neuronal function that could help treat motor and non-motor symptoms of PD not addressed by current therapeutics.

Better understanding of the physiological and molecular pathways underlying treatment-induced complications that have revealed potential targets for interventions to ameliorate these troubling side effects.

Although such discoveries provide great insight into the pathobiology of PD, translation into therapeutic interventions requires additional applied work. Target validation studies determine whether manipulating the availability or function of a biological target can beneficially impact a disease-relevant pathway. Such data, along with information about the target's location in relevant disease tissues and evidence supporting a link between the target and human PD, can all make a strong case for further therapeutic development.

Pharmaceutical and biotech companies, who are generally the best suited to carry promising therapies forward into the clinic, must carefully weigh the evidence and risk-benefit of a target before deploying significant resources. MJFF believes that promoting critical target validation studies within academic and industry laboratories can help ‘de-risk‘ these investments and ultimately accelerate the creation of improved therapies for people with PD.

PURPOSE
The Target Validation program supports work to determine whether manipulation of a defined biological target provides a disease-relevant beneficial outcome in a whole animal, mammalian model of PD. MJFF does not have any pre-conceived preferences for particular targets submitted to the Target Validation program. However, we recommend applicants consider the following:

The target should be clearly defined, such as a specific gene or structural/functional feature of a protein (e.g., its enzymatic activity, protein conformation or ability to interact with other proteins).

Applicants may propose a variety of methods to manipulate a target, including but not limited to use of pharmacological tools or biologic strategies (small molecules, antibodies, RNAi, viral vector-mediated gene delivery, etc.). Applicants may also propose use of previously established genetically engineered animal models (e.g., knockout or over-expression of the target gene of interest) assessed for PD-relevant features or sensitivity to PD-associated factors.

Proposals may include intermediate tests using in vitro, ex vivo and/or model organisms (e.g., Drosophila, C. elegans) to optimize the ideal target manipulation strategy, but must ultimately include within the grant funding period an evaluation of the target manipulation in a whole-animal mammalian model of PD.

Note: proposals focused on new target identification and proposals testing cellular transplantation approaches are not appropriate for the Target Validation program. Moreover, proposals seeking to generate new genetic (knockin, knockout, transgenic) models are generally not appropriate for this program given the lengthy time of animal model generation/characterization and the two-year timeframe of the funding program. Applicants seeking support for therapeutic development should submit to the Therapeutic Pipeline Program or contact MJFF research staff for guidance.

FUNDS AVAILABLE
The Target Validation program supports two-year grants up to $250,000 total costs inclusive of both direct and indirect costs. No more than 25% (Academic institutions) or 10% (for-profit organizations) of the direct costs may go to indirect costs.

Eligibility Requirements
Applications may be submitted by:

U.S. and non-U.S. biotechnology/pharmaceutical companies or other for-profit entities, either publicly or privately held,

U.S. and non-U.S. entities, public and private non-profit entities, such as universities, colleges, hospitals, laboratories, units of state and local governments, and eligible agencies of the federal government.

Post-doctoral fellows are NOT eligible to apply as Principal Investigators to the Target Validation program.

The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research
Grand Central Station
P.O. Box 4777
New York, NY 10163-4777

Physician Researcher, Neurologist, Neuroscientist