Primary tabs

Recording Gut Dysfunction with Bacterial Sentinels

Scott Jordan Kerns of Harvard Medical School in the U.S. will develop a cell-based model of environmental enteric dysfunction, which causes substantial morbidity and mortality in developing countries. As a living model of the human intestine, he will use a gut-on-a-chip device composed of two microfluidic channels enclosing gut cells growing on a flexible membrane, which is coated with extracellular matrix proteins and other cell types. He will treat the gut-on-a-chip with factors that cause environmental enteric dysfunction, such as pathogenic bacteria, and monitor gut-related functions including nutrient absorption. A validated model could then be used to screen for new treatments. He will also engineer non-pathogenic bacteria as potential early-stage diagnostics and test their ability to sense environmental enteric dysfunction in his model.

Grant ID
OPP1108124
Show on Hub
On
Show on Spoke
On
Follow-on Funding
Off
Lead Funding Organization
Principal Investigator
Individual Funder Information
Funding Organization
Funding Amount (in original currency)
100000.00
Funding Currency
USD
Funding Amount (in USD)
100000.00
Project Type
Project Primary Sector
Project Subsector
Funding Date Range
-
Funding Total (In US dollars)
100000.00
Co-Funded
False