Start-up companies and researchers testing innovative technologies and devices can discover novel ways of preventing flares and new cases of Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
A Breakthrough In Monitoring Gut Motility
G-Tech Medical’s wireless patch system could transform how patients and clinicians alike manage Inflammatory Bowel Disease and other gastrointestinal disorders. Our funding helped them refine this promising technology and test it in clinical settings.
Below are researchers funded by the Kenneth Rainin Foundation who are working in new technologies.
Phillip Messersmith, PhD
Professor; University of California, Berkeley; Former Grantee
The Messersmith lab studies structure-processing-property relationships of materials in biological systems and uses this information to inform the design, synthesis and application of biologically inspired synthetic materials for tissue repair and regeneration.
Associate Professor, Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai, Former Grantee
The Naik Lab studies immunity in epithelial tissues to understand how environmental stimuli and genetic factors influence health and drive disease. Their work centers on host-microbe interactions, immune-tissue crosstalk, inflammatory memory and translational research.
Assistant Professor; University of California, San Francisco; Current Grantee
Dr. Rudrapatna’s research applies data mining and artificial intelligence technologies to health care data to uncover information that could improve decision making and lead to better outcomes for patients, with a particular focus on IBD.
Faculty, Weizmann Institute of Science, Former Grantee
Dr. Segal is part of a multi-disciplinary lab of computational biologists and scientists focusing on microbiome, nutrition, genetics, and gene regulation in health and disease.
Associate Professor, Johns Hopkins University, Current Grantee
The Spangler lab aims to expand the repertoire of protein therapeutics by redesigning naturally occurring proteins and engineering new molecules to overcome the deficiencies of existing drugs.
Assistant Professor, Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Former Grantee
The Zhou lab studies tissue-level homeostasis and inflammation, and uses interdisciplinary approaches to understand how immune cells communicate with their neighbors and surrounding environment.
The Kenneth Rainin Foundation enhances quality of life by championing the arts, promoting early childhood literacy, and supporting research to cure chronic disease.
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