genetics | University of Hawai驶i System News /news News from the University of Hawaii Thu, 09 Apr 2026 00:01:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-糖心Vlog官方News512-1-32x32.jpg genetics | University of Hawai驶i System News /news 32 32 28449828 Pioneering marine microbiologist elected to European fellowship /news/2026/04/08/edward-delong/ Wed, 08 Apr 2026 22:18:36 +0000 /news/?p=231943 Edward DeLong is considered a trailblazer in the field of metagenomics, the study of all genetic material from all organisms in a particular environment.

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phytoplankton
Phytoplankton. (Photo credit: NOAA MESA Project)

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Professor Emeritus of and pioneering marine microbiologist , was as a Fellow of the European Academy of Microbiology. The recognition celebrates outstanding scientific achievement and leadership in microbiology.

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Edward DeLong

DeLong is considered a trailblazer in the field of metagenomics—the study of all genetic material from all organisms in a particular environment—whose research has transformed understanding of the ocean’s microbial life. His work advanced innovative gene cloning and sequencing, allowing scientists to study complex marine microbial communities and their role in the environment without the use of traditional microbial cultures.

“I was thrilled to hear the news about Ed’s election to the European Academy of Microbiology, a well-earned honor,” said David Karl, 糖心Vlog官方 Mānoa oceanography professor,DeLong鈥檚 long-time colleague and co-director of both the Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education and the . “Ed and other newly elected members represent the second golden age of microbiology, one centered on microbial oceanography and ecology.”

Scientific breakthroughs

Early in DeLong鈥檚 career, he used methodologies developed by his postdoctoral research advisor Norm Pace to identify microbes “in the wild.” Together they discovered two new lineages of a major microbial group called Archaea (previously not thought to live in seawater) were abundant everywhere—from in the Pacific Ocean to Antarctica, and from the sea surface to the seafloor.

Later, new methods that DeLong鈥檚 group adapted from the Human Genome project to study microbial ecology led to the discovery that most bacteria in the upper ocean can use sunlight to generate biochemical energy using proteins called opsins. This finding revealed a widespread, previously unknown solar energy-gathering mechanism in the ocean, with significant implications for the global carbon and energy cycles.

“To be recognized and honored by world-renowned microbiologists of the European Union was unexpected, and very humbling,” DeLong said. “I believe that scientific disciplines like microbiology should have no geographic or cultural boundaries—yet in today鈥檚 political landscape there are increasing challenges to free and open international collaborations. To me, this makes recognition by the European Academy of Microbiology all the more potent of an honor.”

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$500K endowed professorship fuels research on rare genetic disease /news/2026/03/03/stephen-nomura-endowed-professorship/ Tue, 03 Mar 2026 22:53:20 +0000 /news/?p=230318 Investment strengthens Hawaiʻi's pseudoxanthoma elasticum research center and supports next-generation genetic scientists.

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The professorship honors the legacy of 糖心Vlog官方 alumni Stephen Nomura.

A $500,000 investment in the newly established Stephen Nomura Endowed Professorship at the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 (JABSOM) is helping sustain groundbreaking research into pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), a rare genetic disease that affects the skin, eyes and blood vessels.

Oliver Le Saux in the lab
Oliver Le Saux in the lab.

Approved by the 糖心Vlog官方 Board of Regents in January 2026, the professorship honors the , remembered for his compassion and dedication to patient care. The endowed fund supports genetics research and graduate training in the .

The professorship currently supports Olivier Le Saux, endowed professor of genetics and chair of the department. Hawaiʻi is home to one of only two PXE research centers in the U.S., where Le Saux advances experimental therapies and supports clinical trials in Europe and the U.S.

Understanding PXE

PXE affects an estimated 1 in 25,000 to 50,000 people worldwide. The disorder causes abnormal calcification of elastic fibers, significantly increasing the risk of cardiovascular complications. Though it can have serious consequences, it remains understudied.

It allows us to train graduate students…to become the next generation of scientists.
—Oliver La Saux

Le Saux helped transform PXE from a century-old medical mystery into an active field of research. In 1999, he was part of an intense international race to identify the gene primarily responsible for the disorder.

“We were sprinting to the finish line, shoulder to shoulder,” he recalled. “We were competing furiously but still working together at the same time.”

The breakthrough changed the trajectory for families living with the disease.

“At the time, there was almost no shared knowledge about PXE,” recalled Sharon Terry, whose two children were diagnosed in the 1990s. “Without a genetic explanation, families were left navigating fear and uncertainty on their own.”

Investing in future scientists

For Le Saux, the endowment represents long-term investment in people and discovery.

“This kind of support gives us flexibility,” he said. “It allows us to train graduate students in the Cell and Molecular Biology graduate program at JABSOM to become the next generation of scientists.”

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$2M grant fuels gene editing technology to cure diseases /news/2025/11/06/2m-gene-editing-grant/ Thu, 06 Nov 2025 18:30:52 +0000 /news/?p=224941 Jesse Owens earned a $2 million NIH grant to advance gene-editing research and mentor future scientists.

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Jesse Owens in his lab at the John A. Burns School of Medicine.

University of Hawaiʻi at researcher Jesse Owens has received a $2 million NIH (National Institutes of Health) grant to advance his lab鈥檚 pioneering gene-editing technology at the (JABSOM).

Related 糖心Vlog官方 News story: Next generation gene therapy tools built by 糖心Vlog官方 scientist

“This is my dream grant,” said Owens, associate professor at JABSOM鈥檚 Department of Cell and Molecular Biology. “It鈥檚 the project I鈥檝e always wanted to do. It funds exactly what our lab is passionate about, which is developing safer, more precise tools for gene therapy that can be used across many different diseases.”

The four-year, $2 million R01 award supports Owens鈥 effort to create a new generation of transposases, the specialized enzymes that insert genes into precise genome locations. Unlike other gene-editing tools such as CRISPR—which cut DNA and can sometimes lead to unwanted mutations during the repair process—Owens鈥 method replaces genes without cutting or exposing the DNA, allowing for safer and more precise gene delivery.

Refining precision in gene therapy

That precision is the result of years of meticulous research. Graduate student Chris Tran created and tested more than 200 mutated enzymes to find one that makes very few mistakes and changes only the intended genes without affecting others. The lab鈥檚 next goal is to improve the system鈥檚 “on-target” efficiency—the rate at which genes land exactly where intended.

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Owens observing cells with a microscope.

“Our goal now is to find that perfect balance,” Owens said. “We鈥檝e minimized the off-target effects; now we鈥檙e working on boosting the on-target performance so that the system is both incredibly safe and incredibly effective.”

Owens鈥 lab has already made remarkable progress. Early versions achieved less than 1% gene delivery efficiency. Through years of refinement, the latest system now reaches nearly 100% efficiency, a leap Owens once thought impossible.

“What we didn鈥檛 realize early on was just how fine-tuned this system needed to be,” he said. “If you move the target by just two base pairs, the efficiency can drop dramatically. We had to test hundreds of iterations to find the right combination.”

Building tools to fight many diseases

Owens describes his lab as “disease agnostic,” building tools that can be applied broadly, from hemophilia to cystic fibrosis to cancer.

Imagine something that started in your PhD eventually becoming part of a therapy that fights cancer.
—Jesse Owens

“It鈥檚 a special type of R01 (grant),” he explained. “It鈥檚 not tied to one disease area, which is perfect for us. We can focus on making the best tool possible, and then share it with researchers who specialize in different diseases.”

Ultimately, Owens hopes the technology will accelerate CAR T immunotherapy, which reprograms immune cells to destroy cancer. His team plans to test the system in human T-cells before collaborating with clinical researchers.

“The really exciting thing is that this could one day help treat actual patients,” Owens said. “Imagine something that started in your PhD eventually becoming part of a therapy that fights cancer. That鈥檚 what drives us.”

The grant also supports two JABSOM graduate students, providing hands-on experience at the forefront of gene therapy research.

“Dr. Owens and his team are not only advancing the science of gene editing, they鈥檙e inspiring the next generation of scientists who will continue our legacy of innovation and discovery,” said JABSOM Dean Sam Shomaker.

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Research voyage explores marine links across North Pacific /news/2024/09/08/research-voyage-marine-links-north-pacific/ Sun, 08 Sep 2024 18:00:53 +0000 /news/?p=203219 The trip to Wake Island and Johnston Atoll will provide new and comprehensive insights into the historic and potential future role of these two places as biological stepping-stones for movement of marine species.

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hand holding urchin

A research trip by scientists to Wake Island and Johnston Atoll—two remote spots in the Pacific—will provide new and comprehensive insights into the historic and potential future role of these two places as biological stepping-stones for movement of marine species between the Hawaiian Islands and other archipelagoes of the North Pacific Ocean.

person in scuba gear underwater

Wake and Johnston are isolated coral atolls 2,300 miles and 800 miles southwest of Honolulu, respectively. Both share many species in common with Hawaiʻi, and the apparent biogeographic connection has important implications for understanding how often species disperse via Johnston and Wake to and from Hawaiʻi, versus dispersing directly to Hawaiʻi from more distant archipelagoes, such as the Marianas, Line and Marshall Islands.

In July 2024, the 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 team collected thousands of tissue samples from several species of sea urchins, seawater samples, and water and plankton samples from the surface layers of the ocean as they transited between Guam, Wake, Johnston, and back to Hawaiʻi. DNA will be extracted from all of the samples to understand connections at gene, whole genome, species, and community levels of organization. The work to analyze each specimen will take months.

sharks on a reef

“The research will tell us about the biological connections between Hawaiʻi and other parts of the Pacific and also make predictions about what the future holds, including the potential dispersal of species that may have either a positive or negative impact on Hawaiian coral reef ecosystems,” said Peter Marko, professor in the and co-leader of the research team.

Access to the coral reef communities at Wake and Johnston has been limited by a long history of military activity at each atoll. Comprehensive species lists have not been completed, especially with respect to organisms that are not easily detected visually. Genetic analysis has been limited to a handful of species, but what data are available have generated intriguing ideas that can be tested with data from many more species.

Groundbreaking research

hand holding urchin

Scientists are studying sea urchins because their babies (larvae) float in the ocean, making them easy to observe in labs. This helps researchers understand how long these baby sea urchins can survive while drifting in the complicated currents of the North Pacific Ocean. Working with NOAA scientists, who are using computers to map how ocean currents move these larvae, the research team can predict where the baby sea urchins might end up. They can then test these predictions by looking at the DNA of sea urchins from different areas to see if they’re related.

“Models, genetic analysis, and larval biology all provide pieces of the puzzle, but only by combining all three can we understand how far marine larvae can travel in the ocean, and how often larvae from other parts of the Pacific arrive in Hawaiʻi,” said research co-leader and School of Life Sciences Professor Amy Moran.

Environmental DNA (or eDNA) will be extracted from seawater samples taken from around each atoll and be used similarly to study the genetic similarities of populations of species found in Hawaiʻi, Wake and Johnston. eDNA analysis is limited to a small number of genes from each species, but has the advantage of providing the population genetic signatures of an unprecedented number of species.

eDNA can provide a new perspective on community population genetics by increasing the number of species in analyses from dozens to hundreds of species, including hard to find or identify species that are often overlooked,” said Taylor Ely, a School of Life Sciences PhD candidate who is leading the eDNA work.

Expedition challenges, opportunities

people in scuba gear underwater

The expedition was funded by the National Science Foundation and conducted from the UNOLS (University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System) research vessel Thomas G Thompson. The research team boarded the R/V Thompson in Guam and then spent 18 days at sea, stopping for three days each at Wake and Johnston. The trip was a collaboration between faculty, staff, and students from the 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 School of Life Sciences, 糖心Vlog官方 Diving Safety Program, NOAA, , and University of Washington Marine Operations, the latter which operates the Thompson.

Scuba diving in remote locations presented numerous logistic hurdles and safety considerations for the team. Small craft and operators provided by both the 糖心Vlog官方 Marine Center and the R/V Thompson supported four, two-diver missions per day.

“Once the boats are in the water and away from the ship, you still have to navigate through reefs and avoid surf to get divers to their sampling sites,” said Mills Dunlap, small boat manager and operator from the 糖心Vlog官方 Marine Center. “This cruise was fortunate to not only have an incredible platform to get us there, but also a great crew and a gungho group of scientists.”

糖心Vlog官方 Diving Safety Officer David Pence added, “The support for this mission from UNOLS and personnel from the R/V Thompson and the 糖心Vlog官方 Marine Center was exceptional. In recent years, very few UNOLS vessels have had experience with research diving support, so to accomplish this project was an exciting opportunity.”

“The trip was three years in the making,” Marko said. “We’re especially grateful to College of Natural Sciences Dean Philip Williams and the staff of the College of Natural Sciences, the School of Life Sciences, and the Research Corporation of the University of Hawaiʻi for making it possible to bring several 糖心Vlog官方 students and recent graduates along with us to help on the project. These are invaluable opportunities for them.”

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Genetic editing tech CRISPR comes to 糖心Vlog官方, gets $149K boost /news/2023/04/28/crispr-comes-to-uh-gets-149k-boost/ Fri, 28 Apr 2023 18:00:43 +0000 /news/?p=176600 The education project will ultimately address educational disparities and develop agricultural and science literacy in Hawaiʻi.

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Students learning how to perform digital PCR to analyze copy numbers of transformants

University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 Assistant Professor Zhi-Yan “Rock” Du from the Department of Molecular Biosciences and Bioengineering (MBBE) has received a from the USDA鈥檚 National Institute of Food and Agriculture to jumpstart a project that will introduce the 糖心Vlog官方 System to CRISPR, the basis of genetic editing technology.

Motivated to educate Hawaiʻi鈥檚 current and future workforce in this cutting-edge technology—and to better represent Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders in science and technology disciplines—Du has initiated the first official CRISPR laboratory course at 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补, in addition to CRISPR workshops for baccalaureate and two-year postsecondary students within the 糖心Vlog官方 System.

Zhi-Yan 鈥淩ock鈥 Du
Zhi-Yan “Rock” Du

“This education project will address the educational disparities and needs of curriculum development, instructional delivery systems and expand student career opportunities,” said Du. “The long-term goal of this project is to develop agricultural and science literacy in Hawaiʻi by building competencies in molecular biology, genetics, biotechnology, agricultural science and science communication.”

Du and his graduate students and teaching assistants conducted an MBBE/BIOL 401Lab Molecular Biotechnology Lab-Gene Editing by CRISPR/Cas9 in spring 2023 and have also planned workshops in summer and fall, with the first workshop to launch in July 2023. Students will also utilize materials such as tropical maize from a current research project for this new education opportunity.

CRISPR for the future, food of Hawaiʻi

In the past decade, CRISPR genetic engineering tools have become an essential technology in numerous industries, including food and agriculture, drug development and therapy, as well as ongoing scientific research; however, Du said that CRISPR systems are “not well understood in the general community, leading to fears and misunderstandings about genetic engineering and an overall anti-science outlook.”

Hawaiʻi is heavily dependent on food imports,” said Du. “It鈥檚 urgent to simulate local agriculture and workforce development. The grant will promote the education of college students on novel non-transgenic genome editing technologies, such as CRISPR/Cas RNP (ribonucleoprotein) with gene gun/particle bombardment methods. Students will learn and practice the new genome-editing technologies. We hope to engage more students from 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 and other campuses, including community colleges, in food and agricultural careers for our future food security and quality.”

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Graduate students in Du’s MBBE lab
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Physical activity to benefit people with genetic risk of obesity /news/2020/06/10/genetic-risk-of-obesity/ Wed, 10 Jun 2020 18:00:56 +0000 /news/?p=120356 Researchers used data from participants across the U.S. and found interactions drive a person鈥檚 body mass index further up or down.

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DNA
Photo credit: Arek Socha from Pixabay

Certain genes influence people’s risk of obesity, but many aspects of their lives interact with those genes, and these interactions over a lifetime can drive people’s body mass index (BMI) further up or down. That鈥檚 according to by public health researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in the Myron. B. Thompson School of Social Work.

For the study, researchers led by Mika Thompson, a 糖心Vlog官方 Mānoa public health graduate research assistant, used data from about 6,700 participants in the ongoing Health and Retirement Study, which includes samples of black and white men and women in the U.S. who are older than age 50.

Thompson and his co-authors looked at certain factors of people鈥檚 lives that they can control, such as alcohol use, smoking and physical activity, and factors that they could not control, such as the income level of their family during their childhood. In addition, saliva samples were collected from participants to test their DNA.

“Our findings reinforce the importance of physical activity among people with an elevated genetic risk for obesity,” Thompson said.

Among white women who had the highest genetic risk for obesity, the BMI of those who engaged in vigorous physical activity was 1.66 points (about 10 pounds) lower, on average, compared with those who did not engage in physical activity. The effect was less pronounced among white women with lower genetic risk.

“The association found in this study by Thompson further supports the statement that your zip code is a greater predictor of your health outcome than your genetic code,” said Lola Irvin, administrator of the Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Division in the Hawaiʻi State Department of Health, who was not involved in conducting the study. “The opportunities and choices in one鈥檚 community for physical activity, such as sidewalks, bike lanes and recreational facilities, are not determined by individual choice, but by policies and systems decisions.”

Genetic risk score

Researchers have identified thousands of genetic variations that have been linked to BMI, however, these individual variations explain only a small amount of people鈥檚 obesity risk. In the new study, the researchers took a different approach and used a calculation to create a genetic risk score based on many genetic variations that increase or decrease a person’s obesity risk. They broke down their results by race, sex and age.

Factors such as diet and exercise influence obesity risk. Moreover, research shows that these genes interact with factors in a person’s environment.

“The association between people’s genetic risk for obesity and their BMI became weaker as people aged,” said Catherine Pirkle, an associate professor with the Office of Public Health Studies and a co-author on the paper. “This suggests genetic risk for obesity becomes less in铿倁ential in older adulthood.”

Other findings suggest links between BMI and alcohol consumption, and BMI and childhood socioeconomic status. The researchers will further investigate these results in future research.

Most research to date on the genes linked to obesity have come from studies of people in Europe. More research is needed to better measure genetic risk in diverse samples from the U.S. and other world regions.

“The new findings may help to improve approaches to helping people to lower their BMI during their older adulthood years,” Pirkle said.

Thompson and Pirkle’s co-authors on the paper include Office of Public Health Studies Fadi Youkhana, a graduate assistant, and Yan Yan Wu, an associate professor.

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New eDNA technology used to quickly assess coral reefs /news/2019/04/17/new-technology-assess-coral-reefs/ Wed, 17 Apr 2019 18:00:01 +0000 /news/?p=94656 The project used “metabarcoding,” a technique in which all of the DNA in a water sample is analyzed in one step with DNA sequencing.

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Drone imagery of coral patches along the coast of Maunalua Bay, Oʻahu, where researchers in the Marko Lab use coral DNA from filtered seawater to assess coral cover on local reefs. Photo courtesy of Patrick K. Nichols.
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Patrick Nichols handling processing filters used to capture eDNA samples from seawater samples processed in the field.

Scientists at the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 have developed a technique for measuring the amount of living coral on a reef by analyzing DNA in small samples of seawater. The new research by Patrick Nichols, a graduate student in the marine biology graduate program, and Peter Marko, an associate professor in the Department of Biology, was published in .

Underwater visual surveys are used widely in coral reef ecology and are an important part of any coral reef monitoring program. However, visual surveys are typically conducted using SCUBA diving, which can be both time-consuming and logistically challenging.

As an efficient complement to visual surveys, the analysis of environmental DNA (eDNA), DNA sloughed or expelled from organisms into the environment, has been used to assess species diversity, primarily in aquatic environments. The technique takes advantage of the fact that all organisms constantly shed DNA into the environment, leaving behind a genetic residue that can be detected and analyzed with molecular biology tools.

Despite the growing use of eDNA to catalog the presence and absence of species, a reliable link between the abundance of organisms and the quantity of DNA has remained elusive. In their paper, Nichols and Marko demonstrate that this new method tested on coral reefs in Hawaiʻi is a quick and cost-effective way to measure live coral “cover,” the amount of a coral reef occupied by living corals. Because corals facilitate the presence of many other species on a reef, coral cover is one of several important measuring sticks that scientists use to characterize the status of a reef, an urgent task on reefs that are declining worldwide as a consequence of global climate change.

“It still amazes me that in a tiny tube of water, there is enough information to track the relative abundance of entire communities,” said Nichols. “Increasing the breadth and scope of surveys is exactly what makes the future of eDNA so exciting!”

“Metabarcoding”

The project used “metabarcoding,” a technique in which all of the DNA in a water sample is analyzed in one step with DNA sequencing. Coral DNA sequences are then identified and counted to determine the abundances of different types of corals at each reef. Degraded reefs have very little coral eDNA whereas reefs with more living corals have a much stronger coral eDNA signature.

The authors explain in their paper that this new technique can be used to track changes in coral reef health and community composition over time, as well as detect rare species that can otherwise be missed by traditional visual-based survey methods.

“If you asked me 10 years ago if this was possible, I would have said, ‘No way,’” said Marko. “But advances in technology and falling costs of highly-sensitive DNA sequencing methods have opened the door to all kinds of important ecological questions.”

The researchers are currently applying what they learned from the project to the most compelling applications of eDNA monitoring in communities that are much more difficult to visually assess, such as deep reefs that provide potential refuge from climate change for temperature-sensitive species.

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糖心Vlog官方 Hilo students use biotechnology methods to study invasive mosquitoes /news/2019/01/17/biotechnology-methods-mosquitoes/ Fri, 18 Jan 2019 00:20:23 +0000 /news/?p=89669 Students are learning new cutting-edge technologies that can help them get jobs in fields like biotechnology and conservation.

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At the , biologist and her students are developing genetic technologies, that work as mosquito birth control, to help control invasive mosquitoes in Hawaiʻi.

“The project that they鈥檙e working on right now is starting the process to evaluate and also develop new emerging technologies for controlling invasive mosquitoes here in Hawaiʻi,” said Sutton. “My undergraduate students in our class are learning how to genetically engineer or genetically modify mosquitoes.”

Jared Nishimoto, a graduate student in the tropical conservation biology and environmental science program who is training undergraduates, explains that students conduct the process by lining up mosquito eggs on a microscope slide for microinjections.

picture of Jolene Sutton
Jolene Sutton.

“We have a very small, almost microscopic needle where we pierce the eggs and inject a solution with a certain gene of interest that we want to be integrated and expressed into the mosquitoes,” said Nishimoto.

Mosquito vector diseases are not something that native species in Hawaiʻi have ever experienced in their evolutionary histories.

“And so particularly our native bird species have never had any selective pressures, they鈥檝e never had any opportunities to develop an immune response to the types of diseases that mosquitoes vector,” said Sutton.

Students are excited because they are learning new cutting-edge technologies that can help them get jobs in fields like biotechnology and conservation.

“But our students are also really excited about this type of research because of the impacts that it could have to the local community here in Hawaiʻi,” said Sutton.

The video was produced by Leah Sherwood, a graduate student in the tropical conservation biology and environmental science program at 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo. The videographer is Raiatea Arcuri, a professional photographer majoring in business at 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo.

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Genome editing pioneer opens 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo lecture series /news/2018/09/10/tseng-lecture-series/ Tue, 11 Sep 2018 01:13:11 +0000 /news/?p=84366 Jennifer Doudna will open the Rose and Raymond Tseng Distinguished Lecture Series in the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo.

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Jennifer Doudna

Jennifer Doudna, a pioneer in genome editing, will open the Rose and Raymond Tseng Distinguished Lecture Series on September 17 in the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo鈥檚 . This event is open to the public.

Doudna is an internationally renowned professor of chemistry and molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley. Doudna and her colleagues developed CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats)-Cas9, a genome editing technology that enables scientists to edit the DNA of any organism on an unprecedented scale for a minimal cost. She will discuss her work at her talk, “CRISPR Systems: Nature鈥檚 Toolkit for Genome Editing.”

This breakthrough technology has redefined the possibilities for human and non-human applications of gene editing. It has opened up and accelerated the development of new genetic surgeries to cure disease, and provided novel ways to care for the environment and nutritious foods for a growing global population that is challenged by climate change.

As the public considers ethical questions surrounding the use of the CRISPR-Cas9 technology, Doudna has been at the forefront of the global debate on its use. She is the co-author of A Crack in Creation, which details the discovery of CRISPR-Cas9 and warns of the enormous responsibility that comes with the ability to rewrite the genetic code of life and possibly control evolution.

Rose and Raymond Tseng Distinguished Lecture Series

The Rose and Raymond Tseng Distinguished Lecture is an initiative supported by an endowed fund started by 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo Chancellor Emerita Rose Tseng. The lecture series is intended to continue Hawaiʻi鈥檚 dialogue with the rest of the world in areas including local entrepreneurship, international women鈥檚 leadership, global technology, the integration of science and culture, and indigenous language/cultural issues.

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Study examines social and economic impacts on health in Wai驶anae /news/2018/01/02/social-economic-forces-impact-waianae-health/ Wed, 03 Jan 2018 01:48:42 +0000 http://www.hawaii.edu/news/?p=72800 Research is being conducted by Alika Maunakea at the John A. Burns School of Medicine and Ruben Juarez in the Department of Economics.

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Alika Maunakea

is leading a study to scientifically prove what seems apparent to many: Social and economic forces in a community can impact health.

Maunakea, assistant professor at the at the , is conducting the study in a place he knows well: Waiʻanae, where he was born and raised.

His hometown has the largest proportion of health disparities in the state.

Obesity, diabetes, smoking and alcoholism are more prevalent within places like Waiʻanae, with high populations of Native Hawaiians or Pacific Islanders. Incomes there are below the median, and the way of life, which generations ago centered on harvesting food from the land and sea, has been disrupted by rapid change and urbanization.

Through his specialty, epigenetics, Maunakea seeks to understand the molecular interaction between the environment and genes, and how changes in this interaction are involved in diseases that are disproportionately prevalent in Native Hawaiian and Pacific Island populations—changes that are not due to differences in genetics.

Maunakea’s colleague in the study is , an associate professor in the 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 and . He is a mathematical economist researcher with expertise in social networks and behavior.

Because Maunakea and Juarez believe social and economic forces can push people toward unhealthy lifestyles, their study won’t be confined to the walls of the university.

“The impact of socioeconomic networks on diseases of health disparities in Hawaiʻi has never before been measured,” said Maunakea. “We hope to provide the first measure in the state of Hawaiʻi.”

See the on the JABSOM website.

—By Tina Shelton

Ruben Juarez
The post Study examines social and economic impacts on health in Wai驶anae first appeared on University of Hawai驶i System News.]]>
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