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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SDSU BioScience Center to House Pioneering
Research
Into Links Between Heart Disease, Infectious Organisms
Community Celebrates Groundbreaking
of $14.3 Million Facility
CONTACT: Aaron Hoskins
SDSU College of Extended Studies
(619) 594-1119
ahoskins@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Wednesday, October
27, 2004 -- San Diego State University officially broke ground today
on the $14.3 million BioScience Center, an innovative research facility
that will make SDSU a major contributor to the investigation of
the emerging link between infectious diseases and the nations
No. 1 killer heart disease.
The newest addition to SDSUs
suite of modern science buildings will house the SDSU Heart Institute,
the Center for Microbial Sciences and other core programs and facilities.
With more than 37,000 square feet of usable space, the SDSU BioScience
Center will feature four floors of research laboratories and a 100-seat
auditorium. It is scheduled for completion in January 2006.
The research program
in the BioScience Center will emphasize a unique combination of
microbiology and cardiovascular research, two of SDSUs research
strengths, with the goal of developing therapeutic approaches to
the management of heart disease resulting from chronic infections,
said Judith Zyskind, Ph.D., director of the BioScience Center.
Diseases such as athlerosclerosis
and diabetes have been thought to result from lifestyle and genetic
factors. The traditional understanding of these significant health
problems is changing because of a growing body of research nationwide
shows that pathogenic organisms may play a crucial role.
Joseph Panetta, president
and CEO of BIOCOM, the association representing Southern Californias
life science community, said the SDSU BioScience Center will enhance
San Diegos already vibrant biotech cluster.
The SDSU BioScience
Center will be a significant hub for some of the best minds in academia
and in the business world who are dedicated to solving some of the
most challenging health problems we face today, Panetta said.
Additionally, SDSU students are a major source of research
staff for the regions biotech industry, and their experience
within the Center will make them highly desirable workers for local
life science companies and institutes.
Among the key SDSU researchers
set to work with the SDSU BioScience Center are:
Chris Glembotski,
Ph.D., chair of the SDSU Biology Department, director of the SDSU
Heart Institute His fields of research include cell and molecular
biology of heart disease, and the regulation of cardiac growth,
apoptosis, and gene expression.
Roger Davis, Ph.D.,
professor of Biology His fields of research include gene
therapy, molecular mechanisms of protein secretion, and molecular
genetics of atherosclerosis.
Stanley Maloy, Ph.D.,
professor of Biology and director of the SDSU Center for Microbial
Sciences His research focuses on using genetic, molecular,
biochemical and genomic approaches to develop new antibiotics and
microbial biotechnology. He also is the current president of American
Society for Microbiology, the worlds largest life science
society and an influential force in advancing microbiology research.
SDSU President Stephen L.
Weber said the BioScience Center is a natural next step for SDSU
as it continues to distinguish itself as an outstanding university.
Our faculty and staff have brought in more than $500 million
in research grants and program contracts since 2000, and facilities
such as the BioScience Center will create exciting new possibilities
for more projects sponsored by agencies such as the National Institutes
of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Weber said. Were creating
an environment that will keep our faculty and students on the leading
edge of discovery.
Other new science and research
buildings on campus include the $31 million, 106,000 sq. ft. Chemical
Sciences Laboratory built three years ago, and the Geology, Mathematics
and Computer Science (GMCS) building, which finished a $23.4 million
complete renovation last year. In addition, a Coastal Waters Laboratory
is presently under construction at the site of the former Naval
Training Center.
The San Diego State University
Foundation (a nonprofit auxiliary of the university that facilitates
the grant application process for faculty members and administers
grants and contracts for the university) supplied $8 million in
financing for the SDSU BioScience Center. Grants and donations will
provide the remaining funds necessary to complete the project.
San Diego State University
is the oldest and largest higher education institution in the San
Diego region. Since it was founded in 1897, the university has grown
to offer bachelors degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees
in 72 areas and doctorates in 16 areas. SDSUs more than 33,000
students participate in academic curriculum distinguished by direct
contact with faculty and an increasing international emphasis that
prepares them for a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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