The annual Research Day not only provides researchers with the opportunity to share their work, but to get feedback from colleagues. An estimated 400 people were in attendance at the event, with about 50 staff members tasked with judging posters.

While many posters are presented by seasoned researchers, high school, undergraduate, graduate and postdoctoral students, as well as junior researchers and staff, also can submit work and request to have their poster presentation judged by faculty members.

For Kim Lakocy, a fourth year undergraduate nursing student, this year鈥檚 Markey Research Day was her introduction to cancer research. Working with , associate professor and vice chair in the Department of Heath Behavior, Lakocy helped research the use of an application to meet a new  requirement that 75 percent of patients have survivorship care plans. The team she worked with created an application to populate patient鈥檚 demographic information like name, age and cancer type into the necessary forms. This application is intended to save time and allow Markey to meet the requirement by 2018. This year, Lakocy learned about the interdisciplinary nature of research and plans to participate in research day in the future. 

A diverse array of specialties, from behavioral health to chemical engineering, were represented at the 2016 event with 107 posters on display. Oral presentations were made by one scientist; one senior research associate and two graduate students; and faculty oral presentations were made by , the James F. Hardymon Chair of Urology Research, and , the new dean of the College of Medicine.  also presented the .

The event concluded with an award ceremony. Winners include:

Overall Winner

Stuart Jarrett, 鈥淎KAP12 is a UV-inducible scaffold which regulates nucleotide excision repair by promoting PKA-mediated ATR phosphorylation鈥

Basic Science 鈥 Graduate Student

1st place: Brittany Carpenter, 鈥淭he integrin alpha6beta4 promotes pancreatic cancer invasion by altering DNA repair-mediated epigenetics鈥

2nd place: Maria Dixon, 鈥淎FP anti-sense transcripts in mouse liver and their potential role in gene regulation鈥


Basic Science 鈥 Postdocs
 

1st place: Lei Wang, 鈥淎utophagy deficiency stabilizes p62 and HIF-1伪 to promote stemness property in arsenic-induced transformed cells鈥

2nd place: Julia Schulz, 鈥淒ual PI3K/Akt Inhibition: A New Strategy to Improve Drug Delivery in Glioblastoma Therapy鈥

Clinical Science 鈥 Graduate Student 

1st place: Nathan Pauly, 鈥淪moking Cessation Quitline: A Return on Investment Analysis鈥

2nd place: Daniel Zetter, 鈥淓pithelial-Mesenchymal-Transition in Bladder Cancer Progression鈥

 

Clinical Science 鈥 Postdocs

1st place: Ramon Sun, 鈥淎 liquid diet for mapping metabolic networks in PDX mice using stable-isotope resolved metabolomics鈥

2nd place: Anh-Thu Le, 鈥淭hromboelastography demonstrates perioperative hypercoagulability in hepato-pancreato-biliary patients and supports routine administration of preoperative and early postoperative venous thromboembolism chemoprophylaxis鈥

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