Buoyed by state funding, new biomedical research hub launches in Chicago
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[October 07, 2023]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
With vocal support from the governor and $25 million from the state,
biomedical researchers are beginning to work on studying the
fundamentals of human disease at a new facility in Chicago.
The Chan Zuckerberg Biohub – named for philanthropists Priscilla Chan
and her husband and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg – is the second
biomedical research center launched by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative.
The first is in San Francisco.
In addition to initial state funding, the center will receive $250
million from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative over 10 years to fund
research into inflammation, part of the body’s innate response to
irritation and disease.
The for-profit philanthropy organization chose the Chicago location
based on the application of a team of scientists from Northwestern
University, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois
Urbana-Champaign. Theirs was chosen from a pool of 58 applications.
One of the things that set the Chicago applicants apart, according to
Chan, was the enthusiasm from Gov. JB Pritzker, who sent a formal letter
of support for the project as well as adding a more personal touch.
“Gov. Pritzker showed up at the applicant interview day as the top
cheerleader of the team presenting their case,” Chan said at the
Biohub’s launch event Thursday.
At the launch event, Pritzker delayed the day’s schedule – later
lamenting he wasn’t able to “fully geek out” – when he refused to leave
a lab because he wanted to discuss the potential applications of
research into inflammation in nervous systems and muscle tissue.
“I’m gonna get in trouble,” Pritzker said when he noticed he was being
watched by an event coordinator.
“Yeah, you are,” she replied, hurrying the governor out of the lab.
The $25 million state grant for the facility, which is still being
processed, will come from the state’s Rebuild Illinois infrastructure
program, according to a spokesperson from the state’s Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity. A representative of the Biohub
declined to divulge the total cost of the facility.
The under-construction Biohub is scheduled to be completed in January.
The plan for the facility mixes elements of a university engineering
department and a tech startup. Tissue incubation labs will be located
down the hall from flexible workspaces and an office kitchen and bar.
The blend between a Silicon Valley ethos and academic research goes
beyond the office design and into its budget as well. That’s evidenced
in the $250 million the lab is set to receive from CZI, which is
primarily funded through Chan and Zuckerberg’s stock in Meta, the
company formerly known as Facebook.
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Biohub Fellow Hope Burks presents her research into inflammation
monitoring to Gov. JB Pritzker at a launch event for the Chan
Zuckerberg Biohub Chicago. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew
Adams)
Shana Kelley, the Chicago Biohub’s president, said the steady revenue
stream will allow it to bypass the typical search for ongoing funding
that is common in academia.
“You don’t have to ask the question ‘could we fund this?’” Kelley told
Capitol News Illinois. “You can just say ‘is this worth trying?’”
Kelley, a professor at Northwestern University who is currently
incubating her third and fourth companies, said the funding and more
collaborative research model allow researchers to focus on “high risk,
high reward” ideas.
“We’re not doing a lot of the other things you have to do in an academic
institution,” Kelley said. “We’re not training graduate students. I’m
not teaching undergraduates.”
The “disease agnostic” focus on inflammation came from existing work at
the Biohub’s three partner universities which each have labs focused on
studying instruments that can be inserted into tissue and
immunoengineering. This type of research mostly revolves around building
technology that will measure biological processes at the molecular level
within human tissues, with the ultimate goal of treating inflammation
involved in many conditions such as cancer and autoimmune disease.
“We’ve got to get inflammation figured out,” Kelley said. “We’ve got to
learn to control it.”
Currently, the research center has 11 staff members – with a planned
staff of 30 to 50 – and has ongoing projects with partner universities.
Hope Burks, a fellow at the Biohub, is working on creating devices that
can be inserted into the skin that monitor inflammation in real time.
Burks said this research might be helpful in developing diagnostic or
clinical tools that can identify and treat disease.
“What kind of inflammation is happening?” Burks said during a
presentation Thursday. “Do they have different signaling patterns that
are specific to each other? Once we see what types of inflammation, what
is effective against that?”
Capitol News Illinois is
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