Indian American Cancer Researcher Selected for Fulbright Award
An Indian
American cancer researcher at a Florida university has been selected for a
J. William Fulbright award to conduct cancer research and training in India.
Appu
Rathinavelu, a cancer researcher at Nova Southeastern
University in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was selected for the award July 8. He also
serves as the associate dean for
institutional planning and development at the campus’ College of Pharmacy and
executive director at NSU’s Rumbaugh-Goodwin Institute for Cancer Research.
The Fulbright Program is sponsored by the
United States Department of State and is the government’s flagship
international educational exchange program. Since its inception in 1946, the
program has had more than 360,000 participants from over 180 countries.
Rathinavelu holds patents in the U.S. and
Japan for discovering a small organic anti-angiogenic molecule that starves
tumors and other cancer cells, preventing blood flow that would otherwise help
them grow. Called JFD, the molecule is less expensive, less toxic and more
effective against solid tumors, and is geared to battle breast, ovarian,
prostate, lung and colorectal cancers.
He also holds a U.S. patent for a more potent
molecule specifically designed to combat breast cancer.
As a recipient of the Fulbright award,
Rathinavelu joins a list of people who have become heads of state, judges,
ambassadors and cabinet ministers, among other high-profile positions, as well
as 53 Nobel Prize winners.
Rathinavelu intends to use the grant to
develop and validate new genomics-based tests that could help during the
treatment of breast and prostate cancers.
During the two three-month endeavors, he also
will help establish research
collaborations and train graduate student researchers at VRR Institute of
Biomedical Science in Chennai, an affiliate of the University of Madras, where
he completed his graduate training.
Rathinavelu received his doctorate in
biochemistry from the University of Madras in India and conducted his
postdoctoral training at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. In 1992, he
joined the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences at Southeastern University's
College of Pharmacy, which merged with Nova to become Nova Southeastern
University in 1994.
Source: http://www.indiawest.com/news/global_indian/indian-american-cancer-researcher-selected-for-fulbright-award/article_da833ae8-2991-11e5-b7f4-2bc1fc7a39fb.html
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