The content below is for Position Only
BWF’s Career Awards at the Scientific Interface (CASI) provide $560,000 over five years to bridge advanced postdoctoral training and the first three years of faculty service. These awards are open to U.S. and Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and temporary residents.
The Burroughs Wellcome Fund launched the Career Awards at the Scientific Interface in 1999 to foster the early career development of researchers who are transitioning from training environments in the physical, mathematical, computational sciences and/or engineering into postdoctoral work in the biological sciences, and who are dedicated to pursuing a career in academic research.
Please visit this video overview of the CASI program for more information from former Program Officer Dr. Kelly Rose.
The 2024 CASI RFP may be accessed here: /wp-content/uploads/2023/06/BWF-CASI-RFP-2024.pdf
Application Files
Progress Reporting
Due Date: October 26
Progress and financial reports are required of all Burroughs Wellcome Fund (BWF) grants. Advisory Committee and staff depend heavily upon progress and financial reports to evaluate progress. Late reports inconvenience advisory committee reviewers and impede the Fund’s evaluation of its programs. Failure to submit progress or financial reports in a timely fashion will result in termination of funding.
BWF has provided Progress Report Guidelines to assist in the preparation and submission of Progress Reports in an acceptable manner. Awardees must provide BWF with an annual progress report detailing scientific progress. Institutions must provide an annual financial report. Both reports must be submitted by the due date on forms that will be provided and according to the instructions below. All PDF on-line forms and instructions referenced on this page can be accessed on this website.
No-Cost Extensions
The named investigator may request a no-cost extension at least 30 days in advance of the grant period end date. A request for an extension must be made in writing and must include a detailed explanation of the purposes for which the extension is requested. The request for a no-cost extension must be copied to both the named investigator and the appropriate representative of the named investigator’s institution. In general, extensions do not exceed 24 months. The Fund reserves the right to deny such a request in whole or in part. If the request is approved, it will be incumbent upon the named investigator and his/her institution to provide annual progress and expenditure reports each year of the no-cost extension period, as well as final progress and expenditure reports at the end of the no-cost extension period. BWF will request a return of all no-cost extension funds if progress report requirements and deadlines are not met.
Due Date: October 26
Submission Instructions
Upload three documents listed below to ProposalCentral by October 26
- Activity Report
- Combined as one PDF: Scientific Abstract, Letter of Evaluation & Biosketch
- Financial Report
Sections of the Progress Report
I. Activity Report Template
The Activity Report should be uploaded as an Excel file to the Progress Activity and Milestone Excel Report Deliverable in ProposalCentral. The report should be cumulative; each reporting period will build on the previous one(s), to capture clear progression. Therefore for the reporting period, you will use the last report you submitted and you should not go back and change anything-just update! If this is your first submission, you will receive separate instructions from the Program Team. If you have been granted a no-cost extension, add additional columns as needed, indicating NCE Year 1 or NCE Year 2, etc.
The Activity Report should contain the following information:
- Cover sheet (first sheet)
- Research Milestones/Goals (second sheet, relevant column)
- Mentoring/Institutional Environment/Career Development (third sheet, relevant column)
- Publications for relevant period (fourth sheet)
- Trainee Information, updated as necessary (fifth sheet)
- Funding Sources, updated as necessary (sixth sheet)
- Meetings and Conferences Participated in, updated as necessary (seventh sheet)
- Other Activities, as necessary (eighth sheet, relevant column)
- Final Essay (ninth sheet, to be completed in last reporting period)
II. PDF to be uploaded to ProposalCentral
A PDF should be uploaded to Proposal Central in the Progress Report for 2023 Deliverable and contain the following:
A. Scientific Abstract
Provide a brief (< 300 words) summary of your research written to be understood by a multidisciplinary audience.
B. Sponsor/Chairperson’s Letter of Evaluation
It is your responsibility to have your sponsor/chairperson write a letter summarizing your research and career growth during the period, or use the Sponsor’s Annual Letter of Evaluation abbreviated form (see below) in place of the letter. If you are a postdoctoral fellow, the sponsor is your mentor. If you are a faculty member, the sponsor is your department chair. The letter is due by the same date as the Progress Report. Convert the letter to a PDF file and submit it with your report.
C. Biosketch
Include an updated NIH-style biographical sketch.
III. Financial Report
The Financial Report must be completed by the institutional financial officer using the on-line form provided. The report should contain the typed name of both the awardee and the institutional officer completing the report. Original signatures are not required, only typed names.
- If you submitted a Financial Report last year, information provided in that report should be used to calculate the Cumulative to Date figures.
- The subtotal fields in both columns will automatically calculate as you enter the relevant numerical data.
- The “Balance” in both the Fiscal Year and Cumulative to Date columns should be equal.
The Financial Report should be uploaded to the 2023 Financial Report Deliverable as a PDF file by the same due date as the Progress Report.
If you have questions, please contact Melanie Scott by email or phone 919-991-5107.
General
Can I submit more than one application?
No.
Do you pay indirect costs?
No.
What date should I use as having received my Ph.D.?
You can use either the date of your Ph.D. defense or the date your degree was conferred by your institution.
The eligibility requirements mention that a candidate must be based at a non-profit institution [501(c)(3) or equivalent] in the U.S. or Canada. What is a 501(c)(3)?
According to the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, a 501(c)(3) organization is an American tax-exempt, nonprofit organization. Almost all degree-granting institutions are classified as such, as are most research institutes. You will need to check with your institutional officials, usually called the grants and contracts office or the sponsored programs office, etc., to confirm your institution’s classification. BWF cannot make this determination for you.
Are the BWF application deadlines firm?
Yes.
How do I return to an incomplete application that I saved, but have not yet submitted?
To access a saved application, return to the ProposalCentral system, login, and access the Letter of Intent on the “Proposals” tab. The Letter of Intent may be edited until the application deadline.
Can I change my application once submitted?
You have the option to unsubmit the application prior to the deadline. However, you must resubmit prior to the deadline for the Letter of Intent to be considered. Once the deadline has passed, no additional changes may be made.
What is a “signature block”?
A signature block is found at the end of a letter and includes the letter writer’s name, title(s), department(s), and institution. It is usually found just after the closing of the letter (e.g., just after the word “Sincerely,’ or ‘Yours truly,’) and just under the letter writer’s signature. Here’s an example of a signature block:
Jane Smith, Ph.D.
Chair and Professor, Department of Physics
ABC University
Eligibility
How do I determine if I am eligible to submit a Letter of Intent; what is the first step?
Review eligibility in the Request for Proposal.
Can I contact BWF to determine my eligibility?
It is the responsibility of applicants to read the published guidelines and FAQs to determine eligibility. BWF staff will do their best to respond to every inquiry but will prioritize those questions that are not already clearly addressed in the published guidelines. Please do not contact BWF to ask if we can make an exception to clearly stated guidelines.
Which Ph.D. fields are eligible?
Candidates must hold a Ph.D. degree in one of the fields of mathematics, physics, chemistry, computer science, statistics, or engineering. This includes related areas of physical, mathematical, computational, theoretical, and engineering science. Exceptions will be made only if the applicant can demonstrate significant expertise in one of these areas, evidenced by publications, undergraduate major, or masters degree. You must have this exception approved by the program officer before applying; do not presume you will be given an exception.
My Ph.D. is in biochemistry/biophysics/biology/cell biology/etc. Am I eligible?
Possibly. The Career Awards at the Scientific Interface program is designed to support those working in biology with backgrounds in the physical/mathematical/computational or engineering sciences. If you can show evidence of significant accomplishment or competence in one of those areas (i.e., papers published, advanced coursework, or undergraduate major), and if your proposal draws on that background, you are eligible. You will need to make a case that your work is truly interdisciplinary, and makes use of non-biological approaches.
My Ph.D. is in chemistry. Am I eligible?
Yes, as long as you meet the other eligibility criteria, and can demonstrate that your work is truly interdisciplinary.
I have an engineering degree/background? Can I apply to the program?
Yes – as long as you meet all other eligibility requirements, you can apply.
I hold an M.D. Am I eligible to apply to the CASI program?
Possibly. If you hold both an M.D. and a Ph.D., and your Ph.D. is in one of the fields of mathematics, physics, chemistry, computer science, statistics, or engineering, you are eligible. This includes related areas of physical and computational science. Exceptions will be made only if the applicant can demonstrate significant expertise in one of these areas, evidenced by publications, undergraduate major, or masters degree. In addition, you cannot have spent more than 60 months in postdoctoral research since receipt of your Ph.D. If you hold an M.D. without also holding a Ph.D., you are not eligible to apply to this program, but you may want to consider applying to the Career Awards for Medical Scientists program.
Can I send my CV/biosketch to BWF to determine eligibility?
Due to the high volume of inquiries, BWF cannot evaluate candidate CVs/biosketches. Please read the eligibility requirements and FAQs carefully before contacting BWF.
My work experience since receiving my Ph.D. exceeds the 60-month limit. However, my work has not always been as a postdoc. At present, I am working in a postdoctoral position. Am I eligible?
If your entire work experience since receiving your Ph.D. has been in any scientific research field (including outside academia) and exceeds 60 months, you are not eligible. However, if part of your work experience was not in a science research field, and your scientific work experience doesn’t exceed 60 months, you are eligible.
I’m a temporary resident of the U.S. or Canada. Am I eligible for the award?
Possibly. If you are a temporary U.S.or Canadian resident and you hold a valid visa that allows you to remain in the U.S. or Canada during the postdoctoral period of the grant, you are eligible. If a grant is awarded and your visa does not allow for such a stay, BWF may terminate the grant. BWF will not intercede on behalf of non-citizens whose stay in the U.S. or Canada may be limited by their visa status. If you are invited to submit a full application, your institution must verify your immigration status as part of your application.
I am a postdoc at an independent research institute. Am I eligible for a career award?
Possibly. Two criteria must be met in order for you to be eligible – (1) your research institute must be a non-profit institution (501(c)(3) or equivalent) in the U.S. or Canada, and (2) your primary postdoctoral mentor must hold an appointment at an accredited, degree-granting institution in the U.S. or Canada that will provide support for your application. We make the grant to the degree-granting institution on your behalf. If both of these criteria are met, you are eligible to apply. With the exception of eligible postdoctoral fellows at the National Institutes of Health, Letters of Intent will not be accepted from federal facilities. These policies are non-negotiable.
My title is not “postdoctoral fellow”. Am I eligible for the award?
Possibly. You are eligible if (1) you have at least 12 months, but not more than 60 months of postdoctoral research experience, including time as, for example, an instructor, research associate, or non-tenure track research faculty, and (2) you meet all other eligibility requirements.
I have two postdoc mentors. Can I still apply?
Yes. One of the mentors will need to be the primary mentor. The primary mentor will be the one who can certify the Letter of Intent and provide a recommendation letter. Only one recommendation letter can be submitted. If necessary, your primary and secondary mentor can provide a joint letter to be submitted by the primary mentor.
I hold or have accepted, an NIH K99 award. Can I apply for this program?
No.
I have applied to the NIH K99 program, but the awards have not been selected. Can I apply to the BWF CASI program?
Yes. However, awardees cannot receive funding simultaneously from both a K99 and a CASI award.
Do I need a commitment from a university for a faculty appointment to apply for this award?
No. The purpose of the award is to help postdoctoral scientists obtain a faculty appointment at an institution of their choosing. Candidates may be applying for faculty positions at the same time of application, but if you currently hold or have accepted, either verbally or in writing, a tenure-track faculty appointment, you are not eligible.
I am based at a North American non-profit institution, but my primary postdoctoral mentor doesn’t hold a faculty appointment at an accredited, degree-granting North American institution. Can I apply to this program?
No.
I have not yet decided whether I will pursue a full-time career in research as an independent investigator at a North American degree-granting institution. Can I apply to this program?
No.
I have publications from my graduate (and undergraduate) studies, but I am not the first author of any of them. Am I eligible to apply?
No. You must have at least one first-author publication to be eligible to apply for this program. This includes papers on which “first authorship” is shared.
I have submitted a first-author manuscript from my graduate (or undergraduate) studies, but it has not yet been published. Am I eligible to apply?
Possibly. If the manuscript is accepted for publication or in press, you are eligible to apply – otherwise, you are not eligible.
Accessing the Application
I have two postdoc mentors at two different institutions. Does it matter which one is the primary mentor?
Yes. If your mentors are at two different institutions, the primary mentor should be the one located at the institution where you will be doing the proposed work (the institution you will enter on the “Nominating Institution” page of the online application) This mentor should also hold a faculty appointment at an accredited degree-granting institution in North America.
Can I add a postdoc mentor if I am invited to submit a full application?
You may add a mentor, but you may not change the primary mentor whose name is associated with your Letter of Intent.
What if I am planning to start a faculty position in the fall after the Letter of Intent deadline and before the full application deadline?
This award cannot be made to a tenure-track faculty member, because it is a transition award. If you are planning to start a faculty position before the award begins you are not eligible to apply.
What if I am planning to start a faculty position in the spring after the full application deadline and before the interview?
This award cannot be made to a tenure-track faculty member, because it is a transition award. If you are planning to start a faculty position before the award begins you are not eligible to apply.
Do I need to complete an application in one session?
No, you can start an application and return at a later time to complete the application. When beginning a new application, you are required to establish a log-in and password. At any time during the application process, you may click the “save and close” button, exit the application, and return at a later time.
If one of my publications gets accepted after the Letter of Intent or full application deadline, how can I inform the Advisory Committee of this?
After the deadline, you may no longer amend your application, which includes updating a publication or adding a publication.
After submitting a Letter of Intent, can I change my mentor or institution if I am invited to submit a full proposal?
No. Invitations to submit a full application are based on the information submitted in the Letter of Intent. The training environment (mentor and institution) is an important part of this consideration, thus they cannot be changed for the full proposal.
When will I be notified as to whether I have been selected to submit a full application?
Applicants who submitted a Letter of Intent will be notified via email by the date stated in the Request for Proposal.
Can I include submitted manuscripts in the list of publications?
No. Only papers that have been published or are “in press” (accepted for publication) should be included. Pre-prints, however, such as bioRxiv or arXiv.org, are allowable as one of your five publications. The requirement for one first-author publication still applies.
Letter of Intent
I have publications from my graduate (and undergraduate) studies, but they are not necessarily relevant to the research I am proposing in the application. Should I include them on the application form?
Yes. Up to five of your top publications should be included in the Letter of Intent, even if they are not relevant to the research being proposed.
Do I need to include references in the essay of the proposed work?
No. References are not required in the Letter of Intent and should not be included. If you are invited to submit a full application, references can be included at that time.
Can letters of collaboration be included in the Letter of Intent?
No.
Do I need to submit a proposed budget with my Letter of Intent?
No.
My visa is not valid for more than one year but I need a new “position offer” to get a new visa. Do you ask for a valid two-year visa (for the postdoc period) when submitting the Letter of Intent?
We understand that not all U.S. visas will cover the full two years of postdoc for the award. For this reason, we are not asking for a valid two-year visa when submitting the Letter of Intent. If you are invited to submit a full application, BWF requires that your institution certify that you hold a current valid U.S. visa and that the institution will manage your residency status during the postdoctoral period of the award (perform all necessary paperwork to extend visa status). More information will be provided if an invitation is sent to you.
Can I include figures, tables, graphs, diagrams, and/or pictures in the section of the Letter of Intent asking for an essay of the proposed work?
No.
Do I need to be nominated by my institution to submit a Letter of Intent?
No.
Recommendation Letter
To whom should my recommendation letter be addressed?
The letter of recommendation should be addressed to the CASI Advisory Committee and must be uploaded to your application by the letter writer prior to submission by the deadline. Faxed, emailed, or hard copy letters will not be accepted.
What should be included in the recommendation letter?
The primary postdoctoral mentor should describe your qualifications and potential for contributing to biomedical science, highlighting specific skills or expertise in a scientific discipline other than biology. The letter should also describe the research environment in which you will work, your mentoring plan, the number of graduate students and postdoctoral fellows in the lab, and the supporting services to be provided by the institution.
How can I submit my recommendation letter?
Since the recommendation letter must remain confidential, the recommender (your primary postdoc mentor) must upload their own letter to your application before the application deadline. For this process to work properly, you must send an email from within your application to your primary postdoctoral mentor requesting the letter. The email will contain a link that is specific to your application and your primary postdoctoral mentor. For detailed instructions on how to request a confidential letter from your primary postdoctoral mentor, see Applicant Instructions.
Can the recommendation letter be sent separately?
No. Letters of recommendation must be uploaded by the letter writer prior to submission of your application. An application can only be submitted when it is complete; therefore, it is highly recommended that the recommendation letter be uploaded to the application at least a week or more before the deadline. Faxed, emailed, or hard copy letters will not be accepted.
I have two postdoctoral mentors. Can I submit two recommendation letters?
Only one recommendation letter may be submitted with your application. This letter should be from the person designated as your primary postdoctoral mentor in the application. However, if both mentors wish to write and sign one letter, that is acceptable. Two letters will not be accepted.
Logistics
I completed my application. How do I submit it?
Once the application has been completed and the mentor has completed the letter of recommendation and certification information:
- Click “Validate” on the application sidebar.
- If the application is not missing the required items, click the “Submit” link on the sidebar and hit the “Submit” button on the page.
- If any items are still missing, a list will appear at the top of the page. Otherwise, you will receive a message that the Letter of Intent is submitted. If you do not, please contact ProposalCentral tech support.
I forgot my user ID/password. What should I do?
For a forgotten password or user ID, access the ProposalCentral log-in screen and click the forgotten password link.
I’m having trouble using the online application system to request a confidential letter from my primary postdoctoral mentor. What should I do?
For detailed instructions on how to request a confidential letter, see Applicant Instructions. If you’re still experiencing difficulties after reviewing this document, contact Melanie Scott, Senior Program Associate.
My primary postdoctoral mentor is having trouble uploading his/her confidential recommendation letter to my application. What should I do?
For detailed instructions on how to upload a confidential letter, see Recommender Instructions for Uploading a Confidential Letter. If your primary postdoc mentor is still experiencing difficulties after reviewing this document, ask them to contact Melanie Scott, Senior Program Associate.
If I have questions about a particular program guideline or the electronic application, whom can I contact for help?
For problems with the electronic application, please contact the ProposalCentral help desk. For eligibility questions, please contact Melanie Scott.
Ismail Ahmed. PhD
New York University
Chemical Tools for Spatiotemporal Control and Detection of Neuropeptides in Behaving Animals
Linlin Fan. PhD
Stanford University
Probing synaptic and circuit plasticity mechanisms underlying learning and memory with all-optical electrophysiology
Avi Flamholz. PhD
California Institute of Technology
Predicting microbial CO2 production in global soils
Luis Hernandez-Nunez, PhD
Harvard University
The interoceptive balancing act: The neural computations underlying organ control
Richard Felix Horns, PhD
California Institute of Technology
RNA export for measurement and control of living cells
Carmel Howe, PhD
Oregon Health & Science University
Development of a low-cost 3D imaging system for rapid monitoring and targeted photorelease of ligands to identify driver neurons in the brain
Rebecca Pinals. PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
A Multicellular Human Brain-on-Chip with Integrated Nanosensors to Visualize Neurodegenerative Disease Dynamics
Manuel Schottdorf, PhD
Princeton University
Deciphering cognition with geometry
Jessica Stark, PhD
Stanford University
Engineering Glycoimmunology
William Edward Allen, Ph.D
Harvard University
Reverse-Engineering Brain Aging and Rejuvenation
Sima Asadi, Ph.D.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Pathogen-Laden Respiratory Droplet Formation via Mucosalivary Fluid Fragmentation
Diego Calderon, Ph.D.
University of Washington
Application of multiplex reporter assays towards understanding trans-acting gene regulation
Gregory Handy, Ph.D.
University of Chicago
Developing theoretical neuroscience frameworks to include plasticity from diverse brain cell types
Freeman Lan, Ph.D.
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Understanding complex microbial systems using ultrahigh-throughput experimentation, computational modelling, and machine-learning
Maijia Liao, Ph.D.
Yale University
Biophysics and Molecular determinants of morphological scaling laws in developing dendrites
Leenoy Meshulam, Ph.D.
University of Washington
Bridging scales: from microscopic neural circuitry to macroscopic function
Samantha Petti, Ph.D.
Harvard University
Uncovering remote evolutionary links with next-generation homology search
Boyang Qin, Ph.D.
Princeton University
Tracing gene expression of single cells across lineages during bacterial biofilm formation and dispersal
Liat Shenhav, Ph.D.
Rockefeller University
Early prediction of pregnancy disorders using the vasculature of the eye
Andrew Yang, Ph.D.
University of California-San Francisco
Molecular tools to decipher communication across the blood-brain barrier
Kevin Dalton, PhD
Harvard University
Machine Learning Models for Next Generation X-Ray Diffraction Experiments
Rebecca Donegan, PhD
Georgia Institute of Technology
Heme as a nutrient source at the host-pathogen interface
Anne Draelos, PhD
Duke University
Adaptive Algorithms for Online Neural Modeling
Rogelio Hernandez-Lopez, PhD
University of California-San Francisco
A multiscale quantitative approach for engineering cellular therapies and disease modeling
Antentor Hinton, PhD
University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine
Reimaging, Restoring, and Repurposing Mitochondria and MERC networks
Christina Hueschen, PhD
Stanford University
Physical Biology of Parasites
Vira Kravets, PhD
University of Colorado-Denver
Beta cell networks and neural interactions in healthy and diabetic conditions
Ruth Marisol Herrera Perez, PhD
Columbia University
Engineering models to control cell communication in self-organizing systems
Rebecca Sherbo, PhD
Harvard University
Sustainable food out of thin air
Charlotte Strandkvist, PhD
Harvard Medical School
Studying cell fate decisions and dynamics with time-resolved single cell genomics
Longzhi Tan, PhD
Stanford University
Probing the 3D Chromatin and Spatial Transcriptomic Basis of Neurodevelopment, Social Behaviors, and Autism with Single-cell Precision
Ahmed S. Abdelfattah, PhD
Brown University
Probing and manipulating the neural circuitry of opiate addiction using novel optogenetic tools
Zibo Chen, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Molecular programming using de novo designed proteins
Yogesh Goyal, PhD
University of Pennsylvania
Biochemical trajectories guiding rare cell plasticity and therapy resistance in single cancer cells
Elizabeth R. Jerison, PhD
Stanford University
Migration and population dynamics in the zebrafish adaptive immune system
Stephanie E. Lindsey, PhD
Stanford University
Quantitation of early great vessel growth and remodeling
Brittany S. Morgan, PhD
TBD*
Cracking the molecular recognition code: capturing dynamic substructures with small molecules
Cristina Rodriguez, PhD
University of California – Berkeley
Decoding spinal cord neural circuits through advanced optical imaging methods
Julea Vlassakis, PhD
University of California-Berkeley
Precision oncology via single-cell proteomics
*award will be granted to faculty institution of award recipient
Steven Mark Banik, PhD
Stanford University
Reprogramming proteins for targeted degradation and intracellular trafficking
Jennifer Ann Noelani Brophy, PhD
Stanford University
Engineering organ development using synthetic genetic regulation
Fei Chen, PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Genomic tools for understanding spatial and dynamic organization of biological tissues
Víctor García-López, PhD
Rice University
Molecular machines target, disrupt cell membranes, and kill cancer cells and resistant bacteria
Livnat Jerby, PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Deciphering immune evasion mechanisms in cancer with single-cell technologies
Christina K. Kim, PhD
Stanford University
Simultaneous molecular activity recording and transcriptomics of brainwide neural ensembles
Joseph William Larkin, PhD
University of California-San Diego
Patterning microbial populations through collective dynamics
Jeffrey E. Markowitz, PhD
Harvard Medical School
Resolving the neural mechanisms of reinforcement learning through new behavioral and optical technologies
Sergey D. Stavisky, PhD
Stanford University
Brain-computer interfaces to actualize the movements and speech of people with paralysis
Jeffrey Robert Tithof, PhD
University of Rochester
Experimentally-validated simulations of cerebrospinal fluid flow through the brain’s perivascular network
Mark Wagner, PhD
Stanford University
Computations, recurrent dynamics, and learning in the cortex-cerebellum circuit underlying skilled behavior
Gozde Durmus, DPhil, PhD
Stanford University
Levitating rare biological materials to decode the fundamentals
Kirsten L. Frieda, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Recording cell histories in situ using MEMOIR
Walter Gabriel Gonzalez, PhD
California Institute of Technology
Dynamic control of brain activity and behavioral robustness
Brandon Helfield, PhD
University of Toronto
Biophysics and cell biology of ultrasound-assisted membrane permeabilization for targeted gene delivery
Daniel R. Hochbaum, PhD
Harvard Medical School
Parsing learning-dependent circuit remodeling from spatiotemporally resolved cell states
Chiamaka Denise Okafor, PhD
Emory University
Targeting steroid receptors by uncovering evolutionary mechanisms of activation
Nicolas Christian Pegard, PhD
University of California-Berkeley
Computational optical interfaces for neurosciences and systems biology
Calin Plesa, PhD
University of California-Los Angeles
Ubiquitous biosensing through engineered histidine kinases
Silvia Rouskin, PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Understanding RNA structure heterogeneity and its role in gene expression and disease
Geoffrey Schiebinger, PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Analyzing developmental processes with optimal transport
Shahrzad Yazdi, PhD
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bridging the origin and function of flows in developmental biology
Scott E. Boyken, PhD
University of Washington
Programmable protein interaction specificity to engineer and interrogate cellular signaling
Gregg A. Duncan, PhD
Johns Hopkins University
Microscale airway surface liquid interactions and their role in obstructive lung diseases
Felipe Garcia Quiroz, PhD
Rockefeller University
Repetitive elements of life: from genomes to proteins and material systems
Kelley Harris, PhD
Stanford University
Decoding the evolutionary history of DNA replication fidelity from whole genome sequences
Felix JH Hol, PhD
Stanford University
Eco-evolutionary dynamics of mosquito-borne viruses
Ashok Litwin-Kumar, PhD
Columbia University
Modeling distributed olfactory learning in rodents and insects
Po-Ru Loh, PhD
Harvard School of Public Health
Toward an early-warning system for leukemia: Characterizing mosaic copy number abnormalities
Tatiana V. Mishanina, PhD
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Visual-kinetic studies of pausing by bacterial RNA polymerase using time-resolved cryo-EM
Octavio Mondragon-Palomino, PhD
California Institute of Technology
In situ dissection of bacteria-bacteria interactions on the mucosa of the mammalian gut
Priya Moorjani, PhD
Columbia University
Learning about the rate and chronology of human evolution
Amy Elizabeth Shyer, PhD
University of California-Berkeley
Investigating mechano-chemical mechanisms of mesenchymal morphogenesis in skin and bone
Amy M. Weeks, PhD
University of California-San Francisco
Untangling the protease web: Chemical and enzymatic probes for dissection of proteolytic signaling in immune cells
Ahmet F. Coskun, Ph.D.
California Institute of Technology
Computational single molecule imaging and barcoding: Exploring cellular identity at the single cell transcript level
Alexander G. Huth, Ph.D.
University of California-Berkeley
Comprehensive functional mapping of human cortex using generative models
Ashley Laughney Bakhoum, Ph.D.
Sloan-Kettering Institute
Uncovering transcriptional vulnerabilities in latent metastasis
Michael J. Mitchell, Ph.D.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
High-throughput in vivo nucleic acid delivery screening via molecular barcoding of nanoparticles for bone marrow-related diseases
Arthur Prindle, Ph.D.
University of California-San Diego
Electrical signaling and multicellular organization
Adrianne Marie Rosales, Ph.D.
University of Colorado-Boulder
Dynamic viscoelastic hydrogels to study mechanisms of fibrosis
David M. Schneider, Ph.D.
Duke University
Neural circuits for making predictions and learning from mistakes
Amy Wesolowski, Ph.D.
Princeton University
Impact of human travel on infectious disease dynamics
Jing Yan, Ph.D.
Princeton University
Resolving and analyzing living bacterial biofilms at the single cell level
Weijian Yang, Ph.D.
Columbia University
Holographic mapping and manipulation of neuronal microcircuits
Ariana E Anderson, Ph.D.
University of California-Los Angeles
It’s all in your head: isolating the placebo effect in the brain to reduce drug development costs
Amit Choudhary, Ph.D.
Harvard University / Broad Institute
Snakes, antioxidants, and diabetes
Matthew C Good, Ph.D.
University of California-Berkeley
Cell size and shape dependence of intracellular assembly and signaling
Prashant Mali, Ph.D.
Harvard Medical School
Engineering normal and diseased liver organogenesis
Nikhil S Malvankar, Ph.D.
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Direct visualization of charge flow in individual native biomolecules
Elizabeth A Nance, Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins University
Nanoparticle-mediated targeted therapies for pediatric brain disorders
Elizabeth Hesper Rego, Ph.D.
Harvard School of Public Health
Drug use on the single cell level: differential antibiotic susceptibility of mycobacterial cells using fluorescent reporters.
Ramkumar Sabesan, Ph.D.
University of California-Berkeley School of Optometry
Studying visual function on a cellular scale
Kimberly Murley Stroka, Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Engineering blood-brain barrier mechanobiology in tumor metastasis
Michael D. Vahey, Ph.D.
University of California-Berkeley School of Public Health
Uncovering the dynamics of enveloped virus assembly
Heng Xu, Ph.D.
Baylor College of Medicine
Deciphering stochastic transcriptional regulation at the single-event level
Xin Zhang, Ph.D.
Scripps Research Institute
Scrutinizing the cellular and molecular mechanisms that create and maintain the functional proteome using chemical probes
Gregory R. Bowman, Ph.D.
University of California – Berkeley
Decrypting cryptic allosteric sites resulting from protein flexibility
Yaniv Erlich, Ph.D.
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research
Dissecting complex phenotypes using web 2.0 social networks
Stephanie I. Fraley, Ph.D.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Digitizing microRNA: integrated profiling and discovery for rapid, quantitative, and broad-scale detection in infectious disease
Hernan G. Garcia, Ph.D.
Princeton University
Wiring up the synthetic fly
Karen E. Kasza, Ph.D.
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Mechanical cues coordinating cell behaviors during morphogenesis
Gabriel Kwong, Ph.D.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Nanoparticles that amplify biomarkers in vivo for ultrasensitive metastasis monitoring
Megan N. McClean, Ph.D.
Princeton University
Optogenetic and microfluidic tools for generating dynamic inputs to interrogate and control biological networks
Mikhail G. Shapiro, Ph.D.
University of California – Berkeley
Genetically encoded reporters for sensitive non-invasive imaging of biological function
Paul A. Sigala, Ph.D.
Washington University
Mechanistic probes of heme metabolism in malaria parasites
Bo Wang, Ph.D.
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign
In vivo imaging and functional genomic analysis of stem cells in human parasitic worm schistosoma
Buz M. Barstow, Ph.D.
Harvard Medical School
Evolving the limits of metabolism and in vivo catalysis
ShiNung Ching, Ph.D.
Harvard Medical School
Towards treatments in disorders of consciousness and new models of general anesthesia
Kwanghun Chung, Ph.D.
Stanford University
Clear, Lipid-exchanged, Anatomically Rigid, Imaging/immunostaining-compatible, Tissue hYdrogel (CLARITY) technology for high-throughput and high-content whole tissue analysis
Robert Gregg, Ph.D.
Northwestern University
From machine to biomimetic control in robot-assisted walking
Maureen E. Hillenmeyer, Ph.D.
Stanford University
In vivo synthetic evolution of bioactive natural products
Allon Moshe Klein, Ph.D.
Harvard Medical School
Defining patterns and mechanisms of stem cell fate choice
Sergey A. Kryazhimskiy, Ph.D.
Harvard University
Predicting evolution in microbial populations
Heather J. Kulik, Ph.D.
Stanford University
Deciphering the role of the protein scaffold in enzyme catalysis with fast and accurate computation
Lulu Qian, Ph.D.
California Institute of Technology
Exploring and re-realizing the principles of information processing in biology using artificial nucleic-acid systems
Jesse G. Zalatan, Ph.D.
University of California – San Francisco
Entropic contributions to efficiency in biochemical networks
Award Timeline
Sep 01, 2023
Letter of Intent Deadline
Nov 20, 2023
Invites for full proposal
Jan 08, 2024
Application Deadline
Apr 24, 2024
Interviews
Apr 25, 2024
Interviews
Jun 01, 2024
Notice of Award
Jul 01, 2024
Award Start Date
Jun 30, 2029
Award End Date
Program Contacts



