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211209_CIBC_017
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December 8, 2021
CIBC Directors Jiantao Guo, Robert Powers and Jean-Jack Riethoven pose with the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscope in Hamilton Hall. Support for Nebraska’s Center for Integrated Biomolecular Communication has been renewed for five more years, as the center continues to position the university as a national leader in the critical area of biomedical research.
CIBC was created in 2016 as a National Institutes of Health Center of Biomedical Research Excellence, or COBRE. A nearly $10.7 million Phase 2 grant will fund the center through 2026.
The center is focused on investigating cellular level miscommunications that contribute to diseases such as cancer, diabetes and chronic liver disease. It fosters a systems approach, combining the research expertise of chemists, biochemists, engineers and bioinformaticists and connects researchers developing new molecular probes and analytical techniques with those unraveling molecular mechanisms of diseases. December 9, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
CIBC was created in 2016 as a National Institutes of Health Center of Biomedical Research Excellence, or COBRE. A nearly $10.7 million Phase 2 grant will fund the center through 2026.
The center is focused on investigating cellular level miscommunications that contribute to diseases such as cancer, diabetes and chronic liver disease. It fosters a systems approach, combining the research expertise of chemists, biochemists, engineers and bioinformaticists and connects researchers developing new molecular probes and analytical techniques with those unraveling molecular mechanisms of diseases. December 9, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.