Skip site navigation
University of Maryland Division of Research
Who We Are Capabilities Partnerships Resources News
Analytical Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Service & Research Center Biomolecular Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Facility Biosciences Cores: Genomics, Imaging, and Flow Cytometry BioWorkshop Brain & Behavior Institute - Advanced Genomic Technologies Core CALCE Test Services and Failure Analysis Laboratory Center For Innovative Biomedical Resources (CIBR) Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center Daikin Energy Innovation Lab DLAR Imaging Core Exposome Small Molecule Core Facility Glenn L. Martin Wind Tunnel Herschel S. Horowitz Center for Health Literacy KIT-Maryland MEG Lab Maryland Fire and Rescue Institute (MFRI) Maryland NanoCenter Maryland Neuroimaging Center Mass Spectrometry Facility Michelle Smith Collaboratory for Visual Culture Neutral Buoyancy Research Facility (NBRF) Surface Analysis Center The Laboratory for Biological Ultrastructure The University of Maryland Center for Health Equity The University of Maryland Prevention Research Center X-ray Crystallographic Center (XCC)
Africa Through Language and Area Studies (ATLAS) Anti-Black Racism Initiative Effective and Equitable Weather Forecasting in a Changing Climate with Machine Learning Encuentros: A University-Community Partnership to Mitigate the Mental Health Crisis for Latino Immigrant Youth Fostering Inclusivity through Technology (FIT) Helping Our Bodies Clear Respiratory Infections The Maryland Safe Drinking WATER Study Modeling the Evolution of Avian Influenza Viruses Music Education for All Through Personalized AI and Digital Humanities Observing Wildfires Through UAVs and Fire Imaging Technologies Programmable Design of Sustainable, All-Natural Plastic Substitutes Racial and Social Justice Research-Practice Partnership Collaborative Remediation of Methane, Water, and Heat Waste Seizing Opportunities: Social Capital, Businesses, and Communities Using Machine Learning to Measure and Improve Equity in K-12 Mathematics Classrooms Water Emergency Team
Accurate, Equitable, and Transparent Genetic Ancestry Inference Advancing Environmental Justice By Evaluating Climate-Ready Urban Street Trees In Historically Redlined Neighborhoods AFTER: A Hospital Violence Intervention Program For Youth Victims of Gunshot Injury An Innovative Intervention to Help Asian American Families Cope with Racism and Mental Health Difficulties Bridging the Gaps in Satellite Observations of Earth Systems to Support Climate Monitoring and Prediction Climate Change and Political Conflict Climate Mitigation and Land-Use Digital Equity Mapping Research and Training Program Establishing a Role for Psilocybin in Frontal Lobe Function Fetal Mammary Stem Cell Programming and Hormone Dysfunction Forecasting Acute Malnutrition for Anticipatory Action Genetic and Lifestyle Risk Factors of Accelerated Brain Aging in Severe Mental Illness How Does Statistical Learning Interact with Socioeconomic Status to Shape Literacy Development? Human Rights Politics and Policies: Lessons from Latin America Increasing Sustainability, Accessibility, and Equity in Urban Mobility with A Self-driving E-Scooter Increasing Participation of Minorities and Women In STEM Through Sports Performance Analytics Research Market Design, Energy Storage, and Interconnection to the U.S. Power Grid On-board Energy Harvesting for Long-endurance Earth Observation UAVs Promoting Youth Mental Wellbeing in Rural Honduras by Engaging Teachers as Catalysts Relating Attitudes on Democracy to Attitudes on Race and Ethnicity An Innovative Approach to Remove Emerging Organic Contaminants from the Environment Role of Mitochondria Dynamics in Opioid Addiction Towards an Early Warning System for Increased Probability of Community Infection by SARS-Cov-2 Variants Understanding the Impact of Wind on Fire Dynamics in Mass-Timber Compartment Visualizing Urban Flooding Due To Climate Change
Search
Who We Are Capabilities Partnerships Resources News

Peter Nemes Receives Prestigious Award for Metabolism Research

The chemistry and biochemistry professor will lead a new project supported by a $500,000 grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative.

November 02, 2023

Peter Nemes, a professor in the University of Maryland’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, has been named principal investigator (PI) of a new project to better understand how metabolism and gene expression control cell development in animal models. The two-year research project is supported by a $500,000 grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) and includes two co-PIs: Professor Cecilia Lo and Assistant Professor Dennis Kostka, who both study developmental diseases at the University of Pittsburgh.

The award is part of CZI’s “Measuring Metabolism Across Scales” grant program, which supports collaborative research projects aimed at demystifying metabolism across organelles and cells, which can ultimately provide a better understanding of human health and disease. Award recipients tackle this problem from multiple angles, including studies of inter-organelle communication, enzyme function and more.

“This is a prestigious and competitive award and we're very excited to be among such an impressive company of awardees,” Nemes said. “Our project will utilize unique instruments that are custom-built in my laboratory to study the molecular underpinnings of single cells as they differentiate, giving rise to different kinds of tissues in a developing animal model."

Nemes and the co-PIs will paint a picture of metabolism and gene expression as it relates to the early development of two animal models—the South African clawed frog and mouse. After producing a “transcriptomic-metabolomic cell map” of the frog, the researchers will use artificial intelligence to predict the metabolic composition of cells in the mouse blastula, which are too tiny and challenging to analyze.

For this project, Nemes had to “push the limits” of detection sensitivity by developing a mass spectrometry instrument capable of measuring metabolites at ultrahigh sensitivity.

“My laboratory had to build the technologies to measure these small molecules because the tools did not previously exist. Part of that work was funded by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation,” Nemes said, referring to a Beckman Young Investigator award he received in 2015. “We are eavesdropping on metabolites that are made in a cell as it divides every 30 minutes or so to establish visceral tissues.”

Researchers across scientific fields are interested in better understanding cellular function, which is closely linked with developmental diseases. According to CZI, “By accelerating the development and application of single-cell tools and technologies, we can better understand how disease manifests in the body’s cells and tissues.”

Nemes believes that the tools developed in his lab could have broader applications for human health.

“Understanding what happens in the cell—and how single cells coordinate their molecular composition to carry out a particular function, such as the formation of specific tissues—is an overarching question across all branches of biology,” Nemes said. “We envision that the tools and approaches we’re developing with CZI will be adaptable in other model organisms and cells, ultimately helping to improve our knowledge of the cellular machinery that is responsible for healthy and diseased cell development.”

Original news story published by the College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences