|
Career Development
2007 Awards
Junior Faculty
Dawn Jelley-Gibbs (Trudeau Institute)
Regulatory T cells restrict the priming of CD4 T cell immunity to influenza
Michael Robek (Yale University School of Medicine)
Inhibition of virus replication by lambda interferon
Postdoctoral Fellowship
Shabaana Abdul Khadar (Trudeau Institute)
Promoting immune responses capable of protecting against aerosol infection
Robin Moudy (Wadsworth Center, NYDOH)
In vivo phenotypic effects of natural sequence variation in West Nile virus
2006 Award
Postdoctoral Fellowship
Fengwei Bai (Yale University)
Lentivirus mediated delivery of West Nile virus siRNA therapeutics
2005 Awards
Junior Faculty
Jürgen Brojatsch (Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Role of tissue-specific cell killing in anthrax toxin-mediated cell killing
Isbelle Marié (New York University)
Screening IFN antagonists for novel smallpox antivirals
Postdoctoral Fellowship
Patricia Aguilar (Mt. Sinai College of Medicine)
Genetic determinants of IFN antagonism by Eastern Equine Encephalitis virus
Hana Fukuto (SUNY, Stony Brook)
Global gene expression profiling of Yersinia pestis replicating in a macrophage
Giresh Kirimanjeswara (Albany Medical College)
Humoral immunity to Francisella tularensis
2004 Awards
Postdoctoral Fellowship
Washington Cárdenas (Mt. Sinai College of Medicine)
The Ebola Zaire VP35 protein as a viral pathogenesis determinant
Yoonkyung Do (Rockefeller University)
Improved T cell vaccination against Yersinia pestis by targeting antigen to dendritic cells
Maria Iglesias-Ussel (Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Production of higher affinity neutralizing monoclonal antibodies of every isotype in vitro
Man-Seong Park (Mt. Sinai College of Medicine)
Vaccines against Nipah and Hanta viruses based on Newcastle Disease virus vectors
Neil Renwick (Columbia University)
Biodefense applications of highly multiplexed pathogen detection assays
2003 Awards
Junior Faculty
Andrew Campbell (Mt. Sinai School of Medicine)
Influenza vaccine in pediatric liver transplant recipients
Stephen Smiley (Trudeau Institute)
Priming CD4+ T cells to protect against pneumonic plague
|
|