Republican and Democratic legislators unite to announce a pair of major federal grants to OMRF.
When Congressman Tom Cole stood in front of a pavilion filled with OMRF employees in August, he offered two simple messages.
First, he praised all of the researchers and staff whose work had resulted in the renewal of a pair of major federal grants to OMRF. “Pat yourselves on the back and take a little credit,” he told the crowd of several hundred employees who’d assembled for the event.
Then, he exhorted the researchers to “go save humanity in the next five years.”
Of course, the congressman was joking about that second part. Well, mostly.
As the ranking Republican on the House Appropriations subcommittee that funds the National Institutes of Health, Cole knows biomedical research well. Under his leadership, the NIH’s budget grew substantially.
With the last election, of course, control of the House flipped. Happily, that development has not stalled ongoing support of the NIH, the largest funder of biomedical research in the world.
Cole and his colleagues are now working with Democrats to ensure that growth continues. And the newest member of Oklahoma’s delegation, Democratic Congresswoman Kendra Horn, has eagerly taken up the effort.
She joined Cole at OMRF to announce the successful renewal of two major NIH grants. The awards, each covering a five-year period, will fund OMRF research on autoimmune diseases and human exposure to anthrax. OMRF scientists won both awards after nationwide competitions that included some of the country’s leading academic medical centers.
The grants “continue the strong trajectory of biomedical research growth in Oklahoma City,” Horn said. “When federal grants can catalyze research that benefits Oklahoma’s economy and patients, everybody wins.”
The funding will support laboratory projects as well as clinical studies to help Oklahomans suffering from conditions such as multiple sclerosis and lupus. They will also deliver significant economic benefits by creating and supporting research jobs.
Through the NIH’s Autoimmunity Centers of Excellence program, Dr. Judith James and her colleagues will receive support for projects focused on improving understanding of and treatments for autoimmune diseases, which affect an estimated 1 in 12 Americans. The second award went to research led by Dr. Mark Coggeshall that began after the anthrax attacks in late 2001. OMRF scientists are trying to understand the body’s response to anthrax bacteria and find ways to counter it.
Both of these projects represent at least a decade’s worth of work at OMRF. This was the third time the autoimmunity grant has been renewed and the fourth successful re-upping of the anthrax grant.
In the time since each project was initially funded, the scientists have made significant strides forward. For example, the last round of funding helped OMRF launch a pair of clinical trials aimed at preventing lupus and rheumatoid arthritis—the first of their kind in the world. It also has enabled researchers to identify the part of anthrax that initiates the body’s reaction to the bacteria, how the immune system recognizes the bacteria, and how the bacteria cause damage.
These are all crucial steps forward. But steps forward are not the same thing as reaching a destination.
“Ultimately, we want to create new vaccines that protect soldiers and the general population from bioterror attacks,” says OMRF President Dr. Stephen Prescott. “We want to find ways to prevent lupus and rheumatoid arthritis before they ever start.”
Biomedical research, Prescott acknowledges, is a long game, one requiring consistent support from year to year, from decade to decade. “The goals we’re working toward are elusive. But if we achieve even some of them, the payoffs will be immense.”