HOUSTON – (Sept. 7, 2010) – The
National Institutes of Health today
announced expanded funding of the Baylor College of Medicine Human
Microbiome Project clinical program initiated last year at Texas
Children Hospital.
The program will receive $3.4 million over three years to broaden
the current study of pediatric abdominal pain and irritable bowel
syndrome. A key question will be how human microbes affect pain
signaling in the nervous system.
The Human Microbiome Project was launched by the NIH in 2008 to help
researchers better understand how the trillions of microscopic
organisms that live in or on the human body affect human health and
lives.
One of three NIH-designated genome centers, the
BCM Human Genome Sequencing
Center has been involved with the
Human Microbiome Project
since the initial launch.
In June 2009, the NIH announced the first clinical projects
generated by the Human Microbiome Project. BCM received one of
15 awards
and after a competitive review, received a three-year renewal award.
“Metagenomics (study of microbial genomes) is going to have a
tremendous impact on the future of medicine,” said
Dr. James Versalovic, principal investigator on the project and
a professor of pathology, pediatrics, molecular and human genetics,
and molecular virology and microbiology at BCM. “We are excited to
be involved in this major NIH initiative. It highlights the
advancements of the BCM Human Genome Sequencing Center and our
collaboration with Texas Children’s Hospital.”
Key collaborators on the project include:
- Drs. Richard Gibbs, director of the BCM Human Genome
Sequencing Center
- Joseph Petrosino, assistant professor of molecular virology
and microbiology at BCM
- Amy McGuire, associate professor in the Center for Medical
Ethics and Health Policy at BCM
- Robert Shulman, professor of pediatrics – gastroenterology,
hepatology and nutrition at BCM and director of the Nutritional
Support Team at Texas Children’s
Healthy children and children with irritable bowel syndrome or
abdominal pain will be recruited through Texas Children’s Hospital
and Texas
Children’s Pediatric Associates.
“This project will be scaled up from 40 children last year to 150
this year,” said Versalovic.
As an expansion of the project, DNA and RNA samples from the
children’s gastrointestinal tract will be sequenced to better
understand the composition and function of the microbial community
of this area of the body and how it might affect abdominal pain and
gastrointestinal motility.
“Irritable bowel syndrome and chronic abdominal pain can be very
severe and painful in children,” said Versalovic, also chief of
pathology at Texas Children’s, as well as director of the Texas
Children’s Microbiome Center. “We are hopeful our findings will lead
to many new discoveries in diagnosis and treatment for these
conditions in children, as well as adults. This project has
benefited from scientific and clinical collaborations within the
Texas Medical Center Digestive Diseases Center.”
Currently, the conditions are hard to diagnose and treat.
This project is supported by the
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
About Baylor College of Medicine
Baylor College of Medicine in Houston is recognized as a premier
academic health science center and is known for excellence in
education, research and patient care. It is the only private medical
school in the greater southwest and is ranked as one of the top 25
medical schools for research in U.S. News & World Report. BCM is
listed 13th among all U.S. medical schools for National Institutes
of Health funding, and No. 2 in the nation in federal funding for
research and development in the biological sciences at universities
and colleges by the National Science Foundation. Located in the
Texas Medical Center, BCM has affiliations with eight teaching
hospitals. Currently, BCM trains more than 3,000 medical, graduate,
nurse anesthesia, and physician assistant students, as well as
residents and post-doctoral fellows. BCM is also home to the Baylor
Clinic, an adult clinical practice that includes advanced
technologies for faster, more accurate diagnosis and treatment,
access to the latest clinical trials and discoveries, and
groundbreaking healthcare based on proven research. Follow Baylor
College of Medicine on
facebook
and twitter.
About Texas Children’s Hospital
Texas Children's Hospital is committed to a community of healthy
children by providing the finest pediatric patient care, education
and research. Renowned worldwide for its expertise and breakthrough
developments in clinical care and research, Texas Children's is
nationally ranked in all ten subspecialties in U.S. News & World
Report's list of America's Best Children's Hospitals. Texas
Children's also operates the nation's largest primary pediatric care
network, with over 40 offices throughout the greater Houston
community. Texas Children's has embarked on a $1.5 billion
expansion, Vision 2010, which includes the Jan and Dan Duncan
Neurological Research Institute, a comprehensive obstetrics facility
focusing on high-risk births and a community hospital in suburban
West Houston. For more information on Texas Children's Hospital, go
to www.texaschildrens.org. Get the latest news from Texas Children’s
Hospital by visiting the online newsroom and on Twitter at
twitter.com/texaschildrens.