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Albert Einstein College of Medicine Receives $25-Million Gift to Support Stem Cell and Epigenomic Research and Clinical Skills Training
Albert Einstein College of Medicine Receives $25-Million Gift to Support Stem Cell and Epigenomic Research and Clinical Skills Training
BRONX, N.Y., May 13 /PRNewswire/ -- The Albert Einstein College of
Medicine of Yeshiva University today announced that it has received a major
gift of $25 million -- one of the largest in the College's 53-year history --
from Ruth L. and David S. Gottesman. A photo of the Gottesmans is available.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080513/NYTU059-a)
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080513/NYTU059LOGO-b)
The Gottesman gift will support several important research projects at the
College of Medicine, most to be conducted in the new Michael F. Price Center
for Genetic and Translational Medicine/Harold and Muriel Block Research
Pavilion, which officially opens in June 2008. The Price Center/Block Research
Pavilion is the largest medical research facility to be constructed in the
Bronx since Einstein opened in 1955. A photo of the Price Center is available.
Funds from the gift will be allocated as follows: $15 million will be used
to establish the Ruth L. and David S. Gottesman Institute for Stem Cell and
Regenerative Medicine Research; $7 million will fund The Center for
Epigenomics, to be headed by Einstein researcher Dr. John Greally; and
$3 million will be used to create The Ruth L. Gottesman Clinical Skills
Facility in the soon-to-be renovated Van Etten Building, which Einstein has
leased from Jacobi Medical Center as part of its overall expansion. In
addition, the gift will support an endowed chair at the Gottesman stem cell
institute and a faculty scholar in Epigenomics, as well as the recruitment of
top-flight faculty that will bolster Einstein's already prominent leadership
in both of these important fields.
"In discussions with the College, we determined that stem cells,
epigenomics and clinical training were areas where we could help make an
important contribution, both to Einstein and to the future of biomedical
research," said Dr. Ruth Gottesman, who was elected chair of Einstein's Board
of Overseers in 2007 and is the first woman, and the first former faculty
member, to serve in that role. "We want our gift to support endeavors that
will position Albert Einstein College of Medicine to excel in both research
and medical education, while also attracting the best and brightest to our
laboratories and to our classrooms."
"The Gottesman gift will contribute significantly to Einstein's already
formidable research efforts in stem cell/regenerative medicine research and
epigenomics," said Allen M. Spiegel, M.D., The Marilyn and Stanley M. Katz
Dean at Einstein. "Additionally, the gift will establish an innovative
facility to further enhance the training of future generations of physicians
at Einstein, helping them master the clinical skills that will prepare them to
be first-rate health care providers."
The specific benefits of the gift to Einstein, as well as to the patients
who will be helped by the resulting research and training, are as follows:
-- Exploring the basic biology of stem cells -- discovering, for example,
how a human embryonic stem cell develops into a liver cell rather than
a brain cell -- is crucially important if stem cells are to be used to
treat a wide range of devastating human diseases. Einstein researchers
are at the forefront of this inquiry, and the Gottesman gift
establishing the Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine
Research will help them achieve their research objectives.
Already, for example, Einstein professor Eric Bouhassira is well on the
way to directing human embryonic stem cells to form blood-forming cells
(which could save the lives of cancer patients needing transplants of
compatible blood-forming cells), and to form adult red blood cells (for
people needing blood transfusions). In the area of regenerative
medicine, the Einstein Liver Center is conducting pioneering research
to cure liver diseases and inherited disorders such as hemophilia by
implanting cells that will multiply and restore patients' damaged or
diseased organs or tissues.
-- With some 20 of its scientists studying epigenomics, Einstein ranks as
a leader in this exciting new field, which the National Institutes of
Health recently added to research programs it funds that are "expected
to have exceptionally high impact." Epigenomics is the study of the
vast network of chemical "marks" inside our cells that control the
expression of our genes, turning them on and off at certain times and
in certain tissues. These chemicals, which latch onto our genes but can
also be removed, comprise our "epigenomes" and affect our lives in
crucially important ways. Scientists now believe that many complex
diseases, such as Alzheimer's and autism, result from epigenomic
changes that cause gene regulation to go awry. Altered epigenomic marks
have also been found in every type of cancer that researchers have
examined.
Dr. Greally, an internationally recognized expert in epigenomics and
head of the new Center for Epigenomics at Einstein, has developed a
novel method for "mapping" the most important epigenomic marks: the
methyl molecules present throughout a person's genome. He has used this
method to detect the methylation patterns that characterize breast
tumors and other types of cancers. Thanks to the resources that the new
epigenomics center offers, Dr. Greally and his colleagues can now
devise therapeutic strategies aimed at erasing the epigenomic marks
that cause cancer and other diseases.
-- A portion of the Gottesman gift will greatly enhance Einstein's efforts
to impart clinical skills to its students. Teaching medical students
the basic skills of clinical examination -- how to communicate with
patients and take their histories, for example -- is crucially
important in training new doctors. Up until now, Einstein has lacked a
single, stand-alone clinical center where its medical students could
master such skills. When the new facility is built, Einstein will have
the state-of-the-art training facility that it needs.
The $25 million gift is a reflection of the Gottesmans' longstanding
affiliation with the College of Medicine. In 2002, the couple endowed a
professorial chair at Einstein's Children's Evaluation and Rehabilitation
Center in connection with Dr. Gottesman's life-long interest in helping people
with learning disabilities.
Prior to joining the Einstein Board of Overseers in 2002, Dr. Ruth
Gottesman had a distinguished 33-year academic career at the medical school,
beginning in 1968 when she joined Einstein's Children's Evaluation and
Rehabilitation Center (CERC) to develop a program for children with dyslexia
and other learning disabilities. She went on to serve as CERC's Director of
Psychoeducational Services and later as Director of the Adult Literacy
Program. In 1999, she became Founding Director of the Fisher Landau Center for
the Treatment of Learning Disabilities, a new division of CERC that was
established to provide interdisciplinary services to individuals of all ages
with learning disabilities.
David Gottesman is the founder and senior managing director of the First
Manhattan Company, an investment advisory firm. He was Chairman of the Board
of Yeshiva University from 1990 to 1998.
About the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
The Albert Einstein College of Medicine is one of the nation's premier
centers for research, medical education and clinical investigation. It is the
home to some 2,000 faculty members, 750 M.D. students, 350 Ph.D. students
(including 125 in combined M.D./Ph.D. programs) and 380 postdoctoral
investigators. Last year, Einstein received more than $150 million in grant
funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In addition, the NIH
funds major research centers at Einstein in diabetes, cancer, liver disease,
and AIDS. Other areas where the College of Medicine is concentrating its
efforts include developmental brain research, neuroscience, cardiac disease,
and initiatives to reduce and eliminate ethnic and racial health disparities.
Through its extensive affiliation network involving five hospital centers in
theBronx,Manhattan andLong Island -- which includes Montefiore Medical
Center, Einstein's officially designated University Hospital -- the College
runs the largest post-graduate medical training program inthe United States,
offering approximately 150 residency programs to more than 2,500 physicians in
training.
SOURCE The Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University
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