Skip to main content

The 4th Annual Medical Sciences Poster Fair 

April 19, 2023—The 4th Annual Medical Sciences Poster Fair today showcased the biomedical research and health and community service-learning endeavors of students in the Undergraduate Program in Medical SciencesLinks to an external site.. One hundred students presented posters at the event held in the atrium of the CARE/Crawley Building and Medical Sciences Building. Among them was graduating senior Indraneel Kulkarni who said, “It was amazing talking with so many people with varied academic backgrounds. I’m glad that I wasn’t simply presenting my project but having constructive conversations and sharing my excitement of scientific discoveries.”

Poster judges and visitors comprised graduate students, medical students, postdoctoral fellows, faculty, and community service partners. “Many thanks to the 100 judges who provided our students with excellent critical feedback and an appreciation of their work,” said Bryan Mackenzie, PhD, Professor and Director of Research Experiences for the program.

At the conclusion of the event David Askew, PhD, Professor and Director of Service-Learning Experiences, and Dr Mackenzie presented certificates and modest cash prizes to the top-placed students in each category.

Research Poster Awards

Place

Student

Poster Title

Faculty Mentor

1st

Maria Rich

Investigating the subcellular structure and interactions of ADAM17 and iRhom2

Tom Seegar, PhD

2nd

Irene Sotomayor Rodríguez

Role of inter-α-trypsin inhibitor heavy chain H3 in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Karthickeyan Chella Krishnan, PhD

3rd

Sarah Whiteside

Involvement of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway in fetal Leydig cell development

Tony De Falco, PhD

 Health and Community Poster Awards

Place

Student(s)

Poster Title

Community Partner

1st

Andrea Szep

Keeping teen moms in school: Finding ways to circumvent stress-related barriers for teen parents at Dohn Community Schools

Fatima Khan

2nd

Sonali Doshi and Adam Elzarka

Evaluating a health literacy curriculum for adolescent refugees in a Cincinnati public high school through community-based practices

Mentalla Ismail

3rd

Soumya Jaiswal

Impact of anti-abortion legislation on total reproductive health services at the Cincinnati Planned Parenthood Clinic

Taylor Albright

“I am in awe of the breadth and depth of our students’ research and service projects,” said Anil Menon, PhD, Distinguished Teaching Professor and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education. “The confidence and knowledge that the students demonstrate in explaining their work, and the effort that each and every one of them has invested is making a positive impact in the world.” Menon added, “None of this would be possible without the superb mentoring of Drs Mackenzie and Askew, and the assistance of Shawn Adkins, Corbin Azucenas, Jenny Benkert, Michele Glassmeyer, Maddy Kramer, Milan Parikh, and Danny Wu.”

“Presenting my research was a wonderful experience—one of the greatest joys of my undergraduate career,” said graduating senior Nick Shaw, “—and getting to see the incredible work my classmates have done.”

4thposter

Medical Sciences Students in the News:

Megan Smith Named AAC Rookie of the Week

Benya Coleman Named First Marian Spencer Scholarship Recipient for Medical Sciences Program

Adam Elzarka earns Truman Scholarship

Nicholas Shaw earns Barry Goldwater Scholarship

Shivane Chawla receives Presidential Leadership Medal of Excellence

 

Congratulations College of Medicine Baccalaureate Programs Class of 2022!

Class of 2022 - Undergraduates

A special commencement ceremony was held on Thursday, April 28 in Kresge Auditorium.  Dr. Chris Lewis addressed the graduating seniors.  

 

Medical Sciences Poster Fair 2022

The third annual Medical Sciences Poster Fair, Friday, April 22, showcased the biomedical research and health & community service-learning endeavors of students in the college of medicine undergraduate program in Medical Sciences.

Some 122 students presented or co-presented 109 posters at the event, which took place in the CARE/Crawley Atrium and Medical Sciences Building E-Level. View the program.

“It was really nice to be able to share our research with peers, professors, and other researchers in-person,” said Marianne Emmert (Class of 2022). “Although I have shared my research for presentations in class and for virtual poster fairs, the Medical Sciences Poster Fair was my first time presenting my research at an in-person poster fair. I really enjoyed it!”

Students and program leadership are grateful to the over 80 faculty, graduate students, medical students, postdoctoral fellows, program staff, and community partners who served as judges at the event and provided expert critical feedback. The following students were selected for special recognition and awarded modest cash prizes:

Biomedical Research

Place

Student Awardee

Mentor

Principal Investigator

Poster Title

1st

Maria Rich

Joseph Maciag, PhD

Tom C. Seegar, PhD

Isolation and imaging of the ADAM17 protein using electron microscopy

2nd

Indraneel Kulkarni

Corbin R. Azucenas, BS

Bryan Mackenzie, PhD

Towards identifying an organic anion driving ferroportin-mediated cellular iron efflux

3rd

Marianne Emmert

Qingnian Goh, PhD

Roger Cornwall, MD

Sex-specific role of myostatin signaling in denervation atrophy and neuromuscular contractures

Health & Community

Place

Student Awardee

Community Partner

Community Organization

Poster Title

1st

Rishi Mehta

Maria Jones

Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation

Building effective fundraising infrastructure with the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation

2nd

Sachi Bhati

Sonya Carrico

Interact For Health

Addressing substance use disorder (SUD) stigma in health care

3rd

Sonali Doshi

Mentalla Ismail

Refuge–UC

Expanding mentorship for refugee adolescents in Cincinnati

Anusha Kalavacharla was awarded the Undergraduate Research Award in Physiology presented by the American Physiological Society (APS). The recognition is accompanied by a complimentary membership in APS, subscriptions to top-rate physiology journals including the topical review journal Physiology, and access to professional development and other resources.

Anusha presented her capstone project “Atypical patterns of human cytomegalovirus infection in glioblastoma”, a collaboration with Matthew J. Beucler, BS and William E. Miller, PhD. After graduating this spring, Anusha will join a post-baccalaureate, research internship program at the National Cancer Institute–National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, and work in the laboratory of Laurie Krug, PhD. Meanwhile Anusha plans to explore MD and PhD programs nationwide.

Commenting on the event, Anil G. Menon, PhD, professor of molecular genetics, biochemistry and microbiology, and director of the Medical Sciences program, said, “I was utterly astonished at the depth, knowledge and passion of our students, and am comforted in knowing that they will go out into this tumultuous world and change it for the better.”

Submit Your Photos

We asked participants to take photos of the event for the photo album. Please submit your photos of the Medical Sciences Poster Fair.

Thank You

Thank you for your part in making the poster fair a success.

The Organizing Committee

 

CoM Research Poster1

 

Med Sci Students Greet President Pinto

July 15, 2021—Medical Sciences students were among those greeting UC President Neville Pinto in Kresge Circle on UC’s first fully-in-person day since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. President Pinto treated everyone to shaved ice from the Kona Ice truck. Pictured alongside President Pinto (center) are (left to right) Alexander Sprague (MSTP student), Corbin Azucenas (MedSci ’20 graduate), and MedSci students Indraneel Kulkarni (’23), Anish Sharma (’23), and (in front) Mariam Ranginwala (’23). Alex and Anish are studying epidemiological factors in the etiology of squamous-cell carcinomas in the laboratory of Scott Langevin, PhD, associate professor of environmental and public health sciences. Corbin (now a first-year PhD student in the Systems Biology & Physiology Program), Neel and Mariam are studying iron transport and homeostasis in the laboratory of Bryan Mackenzie, PhD, associate professor of physiology.

Med Sci Students with President Pinto

 

Menon Named Recipient of 2021 Marian Spencer Equity Ambassador Award

Congratulations to our own Anil Menon, PhD for receiving the Marian Spencer Equity Ambassador Award.  Menon is the Faculty Recipient of the award for 2021.  As Dr. Bleuzette Marshall, Vice-President for Equity, Inclusion, and Community Impact stated about Dr. Menon upon announcing his well-deserved achievement: "you have made outstanding contributions to the university community and exhibited key examples to building an inclusive and welcoming community".  

The annual Marian Spencer Equity Ambassador Award is in recognition of the longstanding contributions by the late Marian Spencer, a UC alumna and activist.  According to UC's Office of Equity, Inclusion and Community Impact's website, the award is sponsored by the UC Diversity Council and "showcases current campus affiliated individuals and groups whose diversity initiatives have positively impacted the university".  Members of the UC community can nominate if the proposed recipient meets one or more of the following criteria: shows an awareness for diversity, exhibits sensitivity to people of various cultures, evidence of helping colleagues/peers grow in the area of diversity, and prepares others to thrive in a diverse, global workforce. 

Dr. Menon is the Program Director of the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Programs for the College of Medicine at the University of Cincinnati.  He earned his PhD in Molecular Genetics from the University of Cincinnati. Congratulations to Dr. Menon!

Dr. Menon

 

Schubert Awarded Advisor of the Year 

The Student Activities and Leadership Development recently announced their 2021 Celebration of Student Involvement Award recipients.  We are proud to announce that Medical Sciences faculty member and advisor Dr. Charles Schubert was named the recipient of the Advisor of the Year Award.  He was nominated by his advisees for the award.  

This particular award falls under the University of Cincinnati Student Organization Awards category of Celebration of Student Involvement - Individual Awards field.  According to the Student Activities & Leadership Development website, the Advisor of the Year Award "recognizes an outstanding student organization advisor.  Recipients for this award should demonstrate excellence in at least one of the following areas: inclusive community, leadership, engagement, advocacy, or discovery".  

Dr. Schubert specializes in pediatric emergency medicine and global health.  He earned his MD at the University of Cincinnati in 1979 and currently serves as Director, Residency Global Child Health at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and as Professor in the UC Department of Pediatrics.  Congratulations Dr. Schubert on this well deserved achievement!

image1

 

Elleman and Vemuru Awarded PLME

We are proud to announce Medical Sciences Class of 2021 students Chloe Elleman and Priyanka Vemuru have been recognized as recipients of the 2021 Presidential Leadership Medal of Excellence (PLME).  The PLME, established in 2002, is a prestigious honor awarded by the University President to exceptional undergraduate students.  These students exemplify scholarship, leadership, character, service, and the ideals of the University of Cincinnati.  Congratulations Chloe and Priyanka on this achievement!

15915628614401517873919556

Elleman                                                                               Vemuru

 

Adam Elzarka Receives Boren Award

We are excited to announce Adam Elzarka as a recipient of a Boren Award for 2020-21.  The Boren Award funds US undergraduate and graduate students to study less commonly taught languages in world regions critical to US interests and underrepresented in study abroad progams.  Elzarka is a second year Medical Sciences students.  He is double majoring in Liberal Arts with concentrations in Arabic, Philosophy, and Psychology.  Reading more about Adam here.  

1619031522617

 
Medical Sciences Student Earns 2020-21 Goldwater Scholarship Award

The Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program is proud to announce that Sanjeeth Rajaram is a recipient of the Goldwater Scholarship Award for 2020-21.  This is a remarkable achievement.  

The Goldwater Scholarship is for students with outstanding academic and research potential who plan to puruse research-based PhDs and careers in STEM disciplines.  For more on Sanjeeth's accomplishment, please click here.  Congratulations Sanjeeth!

1618933391289

 

2020 Apgar Art Competition

Congratulations to the winners of the 2020 Agar Art Competition!  This competition takes place at the conclusion of the lab component in the course Medical Microbiology (MEDS 3024C).  Each year, students are challenged to use bacteria, yeasts and molds to create an artistic masterpiece, and submissions are voted on by a panel of distinguished judges, representing individuals working in microbiology at UC Health or the College of Medicine.  

1st Prize

1st Prize: Josh McQuilkin

Title of Agar Art: Pinhead

Organisms Used: : E. coli-GFP, Aspergillus niger (collar), E. coli-RFP

Picture2

2nd Prize: Anonymous

Organisms Used:  Bacillus cereus (sun), Staphylococcus saprophyticus (snow), E. coli (trees and plants)

 

Picture3

3rd Prize: Shivane Chawla

Title: Monstera Madness: Tropical Leaves for Sunnier Days

Organisms Used:

Organisms used: Staphylococcus saprophyticus, Bacillus cereus, E. coli-GFP​

 

Picture4

4th Prize: Abhishay Subramanian 

Title: The Amalgamation of Two Halves 

Organisms Used: E. coli-GFP, E. coli-RFP, and Staphylocococcus capitis 

 

Picture5

5th Prize: Trevor Hay

Title: Come Sail Away

Organisms Used: E. coli-GFP, E. coli-RFP

 

Medical Sciences Students Serve as Contact Tracers During Pandemic

According to the CDC, the fight against COVID-19 needs an army of contact tracers: individuals who are trained to rapidly identify and advise people who have been exposed to the virus. In Fall semester of 2020, students registered for the Medical Sciences Community Service Capstone (MEDS 5050/5051) and community service rotation (MEDS 3050) were trained as contact tracers by a new interdisciplinary curriculum that was operated by Dr. Michelle Chyatte. Throughout the semester, MedSci students volunteered to take on weekly contact tracing case assignments in order to contribute to the prevention of further transmission. According to Dr. Askew, director of community service experiences in the MedSci program, “service as a contact tracer is the ultimate example of community service during a national crisis. Our students have stepped up to plate and shown an amazing ability to juggle their work at regional community agencies with the demands of weekly contact tracing”. Some student testimonials about his experience are shown below:

· “Contact tracing has given me a glimpse into life as a doctor, in the sense that within a couple of minutes, I must know so much about someone’s health and life.”

· “I am a person who calls people on the phone, but I have found that after contact tracing I have gotten more confident talking to random people on the phone. I have also gotten the wonderful opportunity to work on my empathy.”

· “Contact tracers must be flexible, which is a soft skill that is important for any healthcare professional aiming to combat the rapid spread of COVID-19. Personally, this experience has allowed me to make a difference in a tangible way. This is much different than what feels like years of preparing to make a difference on the journey towards becoming a healthcare professional. Through contact tracing, students are able to directly impact health outcomes during an incredibly dangerous pandemic rather than watch from the sidelines.”

· “ I applaud the university for doing its best to handle the inevitable explosion of cases that has come with students being back on campus. I have learned how important it is to foster a culture of kindness, patience, and flexibility, especially given the multitude of hiccups that have been experienced along the way in testing a new system and coordinating the team in a manner never done before.”

 

Medical Sciences Recent Award Recipients

A few of our medical sciences students recently earned Nationally Competitive Awards. We wanted to not only congratulate them, but also share their journey. Below is a review and supplemental article for each of the recipients. Please join us in congratulating Mohamed, Rishi, and Erika!

Mohamed Elzarka - Congratulations to Mohamed on being named a Knight Hennessy Scholar. Mohamed is UC's first recipient, and the scholarship will support his studies at the Stanford University School of Medicine starting this fall. For more information on Mohamed's achievement, click HERE.

mohamed-elzarka

Rishi Mehta - Congratulations to Rishi Mehta on being named a Goldwater Scholar. As a second year medical sciences student, Rishi has worked in the laboratory of Laura Ramsey, UC assistant professor of pediatrics and research at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. Fore more information on Rishi's achievement, please click HERE.

rishi-mehta

Erika Nguyen - Congratulations to Erika, one of four UC students to win a Fulbright grant. Erika will be an English Teaching Assistant in Vietnam. For more information on Erika's achievement, click HERE.

erika-nguyen

Medical Sciences Virtual Graduation Ceremony

The COVID-19 pandemic caused the cancellation of traditional graduation ceremonies for the University of Cincinnati this spring. In response, the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program created a unique way to celebrate the accomplishments of the Medical Sciences Class of 2020. On Friday, May 8, the faculty and staff of the program, along with the graduating seniors and their families and friends, joined Anil Menon, PhD, Associate Dean and Director of the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program for a virtual graduation ceremony live via Webex.

Philip Diller, MD, PhD, Senior Associate Dean, Medical Education for the College of Medicine gave the commencement address. University of Cincinnati President, Neville G. Pinto, PhD, appeared in a pre-recorded video congratulating the class. 53 students received the Bachelor of Science in Medical Sciences degree.

The full ceremony can now be viewed on You Tube by clicking HERE.

WCPO-TV Channel 9 did a story on the ceremony. This can be viewed HERE.

Thank you to the faculty and staff of the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program for their support of these students through the years. Congratulations to the Medical Sciences Class of 2020!zoom-thumbnail

Rishi Mehta Named a 2020 Goldwater Scholar

Rishi Mehta, a sophomore student in UC's medical sciences baccalaureate program (MSBP) in the college of medicine has been named a 2020 Goldwater Scholar. The Goldwater Scholarship recognizes college sophomores and juniors who show exceptional promise of becoming this Nation’s next generation of research leaders in the natural sciences, engineering and mathematics. Rishi's research in gastrointestinal immunology in the laboratory of Marc Rothenberg, MD PhD, professor of pediatrics at UC College of Medicine and Cincinnati Children's Hospital, is aimed at translating basic science discoveries into personalized treatments for inflammatory bowel disease.

Lauren Styczynski's Research Receives "Student-Faculty Collaboration Award"

January 22, 2020: Lauren Styczynksi, a senior medical sciences student, has been working diligently on research to see if Vincristine, a common chemotherapy often used in treatment for leukemia, might prime and alter the pain perception if it's administered in adulthood. She collaborated with Dr. Mark Baccei. Their work produced a URC Grant and the Student-Faculty Collaboration Award through the University of Cincinnati Office of Research. To view their work, please visit this link. Congratulations Laura! Thank you for representing medical sciences so well!laurendaef

MSBP Professor Appointed Deputy Editor of Advances in Physiology Education

mackenzieJanuary 1, 2020: Bryan Mackenzie, PhD, associate professor of physiology at UC's college of medicine, has been appointed Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the journal Advances in Physiology Education. The journal, which is published by the American Physiological Society, promotes and disseminates educational scholarship in order to enhance teaching and learning of physiology and medical sciences. Advances publishes peer-reviewed descriptions of innovations that improve teaching in the classroom and laboratory, essays on education, and review articles based on our current understanding of physiological mechanisms.

"It's great honor for the medical sciences program that Dr Mackenzie has been elected to be the deputy editor for Advances in Physiology Education," said Anil Menon, PhD, director of UC's medical sciences program. "It's an honor not only for the program but for Dr Mackenzie who has been a leader in undergraduate education in physiology. Not only has he performed incredible research in his own laboratory with undergraduate students, but those undergraduate students have been inspired and gone on to do great things, including winners of national awards. I think this recognition is long overdue, and it is fully and richly deserved."

"Few things match the excitement and satisfaction of teaching and mentoring in science—sharing knowledge, expertise, and experience—to students eager to learn," said Mackenzie. "At Advances, our goals are to explore the content that we should be teaching our students in the biomedical sciences and to identify teaching methodologies that best deliver that content to our students across a broad range of learning styles and preferences, making sure that no-one is left behind. I am thrilled to take on this new role as deputy editor."

Dr Mackenzie serves as director of research experiences for the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program and directs MSBP research courses as well as Statistics and Experimental Design, and Interprofessional Education.

Journal Article Discusses the Benefits of Peer Teaching at the Undergraduate Level

December 19, 2019: A scholarly article published today in the journal Advances of Physiology Education provides new evidence that peer teaching at the undergraduate level raises student learning outcomes—and that's precisely the approach being taken in some of the more challenging courses within the Medical Sciences Baccalaureate Program (MSBP) at UC. The article discusses the role of undergradaute teaching assistants, referred to at UC as supplemental instruction leaders.

Supplemental Instruction (SI) engages students through weekly review sessions and office hours in "historically difficult courses". Several MSBP juniors and seniors currently serve as SI leaders in upper-level MSBP courses. Annually, six MSBP courses incorporate supplemental instruction, those are: MEDS3020 Introduction to Medical Biochemistry, MEDS3021 Fundamentals of Molecular Genetics, MEDS3023C Statistics & Experimental Design, MEDS3026 Human Physiology, MEDS4027 Principles of Biochemistry I, and MEDS4028 Principles of Biochemistry II.

The article by Douglas B Luckie and colleagues makes the point that undergraduate peer teachers "are perhaps uniquely qualified and positioned to be the optimal, the ideal, advocate to raise learning in their peers."

Ohio Physiological Society Annual Meeting

September 21, 2019: Students and faculty from UC's undergraduate medical sciences program took part today in the Ohio Physiological Society (OPS) annual meeting at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. Founded in 1975, OPS is a regional chapter of the American Physiological Society (APS). The OPS meeting featured the APS Keynote Lecture, “Why do mice run better with SOCCs?” delivered by Robert T Dirksen, PhD (University of Rochester), over 80 poster presentations, and a series of platform presentations given by students and early-career scientists/faculty. OPS is an ideal regional forum for students and trainees to present their work in biomedical and translational science.

Two medical sciences majors were recognized for research excellence. Rishi Mehta was awarded the AD Instruments Travel Award of the Ohio Physiological Society. This award provides $750 so that Rishi (class of 2022) can attend Experimental Biology 2020 in San Diego, California, and present the research he has been conducting in the laboratory of Marc Rothenberg, MD, professor of pediatrics at UC College of Medicine and Cincinnati Children's Hospital. Rishi presented his poster titled "Loss of peptidyl-arginine deiminase 1-mediated citrullination drives esophageal epithelial barrier impairment in allergic inflammation".

Vighnesh Ramesh (class of 2020) won an OPS research excellence award ($50) for his poster presentation "Inhibition of TRAF6 signaling as a therapeutic approach in acute myeloid leukemia (AML)" Ramesh has been conducting research in the laboratory of Daniel Starczynowski, PhD professor of pediatrics and of cancer biology at UC College of Medicine and Cincinnati Children's Hospital.

At the conclusion of the meeting, Nami Tajima, PhD, assistant professor of physiology and biophysics at Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) was elected President of OPS. CWRU will host the Ohio Physiological Society annual meeting in the fall of 2020 in Cleveland, Ohio.

Medical Sciences Poster Fair Caps Year of Research and Health & Community Successes

April 26, 2019: The second annual Medical Sciences Poster Fair today showcased the biomedical research and health & community service endeavors of students in the baccalaureate program in medical sciences. Some 57 students from the freshman through senior classes presented posters at the event, held in the CARE/Crawley Atrium. Among them were 31 capstone presentations from the graduating Class of 2019.

An outstanding cadre of 60 judges—comprised of faculty, postdoctoral fellows, graduate students, community partners, and program professionals—evaluated the poster presentations. The MedSci program is especially grateful to the judges for sharing their time and expertise, and for providing valuable critical feedback. The judges noted that the presentations were broadly of the highest calibre and appreciated the hard work and intellectual contributions of our students.

First prizes, including an award certificate and $75 cash award, were given to the students judged top of the biomedical research and health & community posters. In each section, there were also three runners-up awards comprising an award certificate and $25 cash award. Congratulations!

Biomedical Research

First Prize
Nihar Rama
Runners-Up Prizes
Scottie Emmert
Rahul Sandella
Amy Tran

Health & Community

First Prize
Ellena Privitera
Runners-Up Prizes
Zohabe Bakali
Emily Kim
Anna Layman

The American Physiological Society (APS) sponsored an award for the best physiology presentation. The APS Local Undergraduate Research Award in Physiology for 2019 went to Farhan Ilyas (Class of 2020). Farhan's research, in the laboratory of Laura Conforti, PhD, professor of nephrology, explores the etiology of systemic lupus erythematosus, an autoimmune disorder. Farhan is studying how the functional properties of potassium channels contribute to T-cell hyperactivity in this chronic disease. The APS award comprised an award certificate, complimentary membership in APS for one year, and an APS T-shirt and lapel pin.

Two Medical Sciences Students Recipients of the Presidential Leadership Medal of Excellence

April 17, 2019: Medical Sciences seniors Scottie Emmert and Rahul Sandella have been named recipients of the 2019 Presidential Leadership Medal of Excellence. Established in 2002, the medal is a prestigious honor awarded by the University President to exceptional graduating students who best exemplify scholarship, leadership, character, service and the ideals of the University of Cincinnati.

Emmert, a native of Cincinnati, and Sandella, from Mason, Ohio, will graduate Bachelor of Science this spring, having majored in medical sciences. You can read more about Scottie's story here. And read more of Rahul's story here.

Andrea Ori Awarded a 2019 Fulbright Study/Research Grant

April, 2019: Andrea Ori, a graduating senior in the Medical Sciences program, has been named a 2019 Fulbright Scholar in the study/research grant program for graduating seniors or recent graduates. Applicants for study/research awards design their own projects and will typically work with advisers at foreign universities or other institutes of higher education.

The study/research awards are available in approximately 140 countries. The grant supports the student's expenses such as travel, accommodation, and living expenses in the foreign country. Andrea will begin her research project in France in fall of 2019.

Nihar Rama Named a 2019 Barry Goldwater Scholar

April, 2019: Medical Sciences sophomore Nihar Rama has been named a 2019 Barry Goldwater Scholar. The award recognizes undergraduate sophomore or junior students majoring in the natural sciences, mathematics, or engineering and who show exceptional promise of becoming the nation’s next generation of research leaders in these fields. Read More

Azucenas and Stone Awarded American Physiological Society Summer Research Fellowships

March 28, 2019: Medical sciences juniors Corbin Azucenas and Sydney Stone have each been awarded STRIDE summer research fellowships from the American Physiological Society.

The award includes a $4,500 summer stipend, a $500 contribution to the host laboratory for research costs, and travel expenses for the student to present their work at a national conference.

Corbin and Sydney are conducting research on iron transport and homeostasis in the laboratory of Bryan Mackenzie, PhD, associate professor of physiology and Medical Sciences Program director of research experiences. Sydney’s research project explores a potential mechanism of preventing iron overload. Corbin’s research focuses on the molecular physiology of ferroportin—a protein that is responsible for the export of iron from enterocytes and macrophages—and the role of extracellular calcium in activating ferroportin function in vitro and in vivo.

Scottie Emmert's Research Paper Describes a Novel Animal Model of Hydrocephalus

February 9, 2019: Medical Sciences senior Scottie Emmert has used a new genome-editing technology known as CRISPR to mutate in the rat a gene known as L1cam, creating a novel animal model of hydrocephalus, a severe and relatively common disorder in human infants. His first-author research article was published today in the Journal of Neurosurgery. Scottie has been working since his freshman year in the laboratory of June Goto, PhD, instructor of pediatric medicine, and Francesco Mangano, DO, professor of pediatrics, in the Division of Neurosurgery at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and UC College of Medicine. The novel animal model of hydrocephalus is expected to aid in the development of new surgical and medical treatment options that will improve patient outcomes and quality of life.

Intranet Login

Contact Us

Medical Sciences 
Baccalaureate Program

Medical Sciences Building
231 Albert Sabin Way
PO Box 670552
Cincinnati, OH 45267-0552

Mail Location: 0552
Phone: 513-558-7650
Email: commedsci@uc.edu