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San Diego State Appoints BioScience Center Director
Dr. Roberta Gottlieb Starts This Fall as Frederick G. Henry Chair in Life Sciences
Contact: Lorena Nava
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Tel: (619) 594-3952 office, (619) 309-5179 cell
lnava@mail.sdsu.edu

Dr. Roberta Gottlieb
(Credit: San Diego State University)
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SAN DIEGO (Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2006) - San Diego State University announced today that it has appointed renowned heart researcher Dr. Roberta Gottlieb director of the new SDSU BioScience Center. Formerly of The Scripps Research Institute, Gottlieb will lead the center starting this fall as the Frederick G. Henry Chair in Life Sciences.
Gottlieb received her bachelor’s and medical degrees from The Johns Hopkins University. She has published widely in the premier journals of science, has contributed more than 30 book chapters and has lectured throughout the world. Gottlieb serves on National Institute of Health and American Heart Association study sections and on the editorial boards of four major cardiovascular research journals. She is principal investigator on three active NIH grants.
At TSRI, Dr. Gottlieb served as associate professor in the Hematology Division of the Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine. Her research focuses on programmed heart cell death, and specifically on identifying biochemical events during cell death induced by myocardial ischemia (inadequate blood flow that leads to oxygen deprivation). These biochemical events may serve as targets of therapeutic intervention.
"I have two goals for the BioScience Center," Gottlieb said. "The first is to do excellent scientific research in the connections between infection, inflammation and heart diseases. The second is an extension of the university’s mission—teaching scientists how to become leaders in their fields by creating an environment where they are inspired to do great science and are mentored to become great scientists."
Earlier this year, Gottlieb helped SDSU Heart Institute researchers secure a major grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, part of the NIH. The $10 million grant will fund a five-year study examining how protecting mitochondria, the cell’s energy centers, can preserve heart cells during a heart attack. Gottlieb will now move her research component of that major award to SDSU.
The BioScience Center director position is endowed by a $3 million gift from the estate of Frederick G. Henry, an SDSU alumnus who served as a communications officer in the U.S. Navy. Henry passed away on June 17, about 18 months after making his donation to the university.
"Fred Henry wanted us to find a talented researcher who would lead SDSU’s health-related research to national prominence," said Thomas Scott, SDSU vice president for Research. "We did a national search to find the first Henry Chair in Life Sciences, and I’m sure he’d be very happy that the search brought us Dr. Gottlieb."
Scott added that Gottlieb’s abilities go well beyond leadership in the laboratory.
"Dr. Gottlieb is already well-known in the local scientific community, and that recognition will assist our seeking the private philanthropy necessary to realize the potential of the BioScience Center," he said.
The SDSU BioScience Center is an innovative research facility whose scientists study the links between infectious and heart diseases. With more than 33,000 square feet of usable space, the center will feature three floors of research laboratories, offices and the 100-seat Alan and Debbie Gold Auditorium for the Life Sciences. The BioScience Center opened in March, with the first lab coming on line this fall. In all, more than a dozen researchers are affiliated with the SDSU BioScience Center.
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 bachelor’s degrees in 81 areas, master’s degrees in 72 areas and doctorates in 16 areas. SDSU’s nearly 34,000 students participate in an 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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