2024 Seed Grant Program

The Cancer Center at Illinois (CCIL) is soliciting interdisciplinary team research proposals to initiate new collaborations and enhance existing collaborations among faculty. This seed grant program aims to enable faculty teams to:

Student Researcher Testing Samples
  • Develop novel cancer-focused research ideas that require the involvement of multiple cancer investigators from different disciplines.
  • Formulate a hypothesis-driven or technology-focused research project that relates to one or, ideally, both of the CCIL research programs and their accompanying themes.
  • Collect preliminary data or other relevant information to support a feasible approach for grant proposals to an NCI-recognized funding agency.
  • Garner external funding for multi-investigator, program project level research projects using CCIL support as a catalyst.

Proposals were due May 1.

Eligibility

Research Team

Proposals must reflect substantive involvement of multiple investigators from different scientific disciplines and/or academic departments.

Projects should demonstrate substantive collaboration between CCIL members and must specifically address CCIL research program strategic themes. Proposals should include a description of the innovative nature of the research and the team’s capabilities, where the contribution of each collaborator’s expertise is evident. At least two of the team members must be current CCIL members.

Principal Investigator

Each project will identify a lead principal investigator (PI) who assumes organizational leadership for the project. A faculty member may only be PI on one submitted project. However, there is no limit to being a co-investigator on other projects. Applicants are strongly encouraged to include faculty at the Assistant Professor rank on their teams. Priority will be given to projects for which PIs are existing CCIL members. Preference will be given to investigators who have not previously received substantial CCIL research support funding.

Please review the full RFP for complete eligibility requirements.

Funding

Each research team may submit proposals for up to $200,000 for up to a 2-year period. Funds will be disbursed as follows:

  • up to $100,000 in funding for Year 1
  • up to $100,000 in support for Year 2

CCIL funding to launch research projects is expected to be catalytic. Projects will be expected to achieve milestones and actively seek significant external support in the form of a multi-PI research proposal to NIH, NSF, DOD, or other federal agencies, industries, or foundations. Investigators must submit progress reports at critical time points which may affect continued support. The CCIL will release Year 2 funds only after successfully completing the stated goals and metrics outlined in Year 1. This must include a collaborative proposal submission that is at least at the R01 level. A National Cancer Institute (NCI) submission is HIGHLY preferred. The Cancer Center at Illinois must be listed as the institute of record for the submission.

Project costs may include supplies, staff time, and research facility use fees. Funds to be sent to other institutions or organizations must receive prior approval from the CCIL. The funds cannot support tenure-track faculty salaries.

Reporting

Funded investigators should participate in monthly progress update discussions with CCIL leadership/administration. Two written reports are required:

  1. Year 1 Progress Report
  2. Final Project Report

Each should highlight the collaborative nature of the research and address progress made toward the specific goals, milestones, and metrics. Each project PI must present at the CCIL Annual Retreat (on the progress of Phase 1 and Final Project).

Proposal Preparation

Format

Proposals should not exceed seven pages (single space, 0.5-inch margins, Arial 11-point font, including figures and tables). Guidelines and the maximum number of pages for each section are described below. Supplemental attachments are not permitted.

Coversheet/Title Page

This page must include the project title, the names of the research team members and their primary affiliations (indicate the lead PI), their contact information, and the funding amount requested.

Content

Section 1. Project Abstract (1 Page)

  • Limit length to 30 lines or less of text
  • Include the project’s broad, long-term objectives and specific aims
  • Include a description of the research design and methods for achieving the stated goals
  • Write in plain language, so even a non-scientist can understand the importance of the project

Section 2. Project Narrative (3 Pages)

  • Describe the research project and its cancer relevance, including its potential for broad impact. Please note the review criteria listed below
  • Discuss how the proposed activities will leverage existing strengths across CCIL programs and themes
  • Include a statement of the potential translational application of the research being proposed
  • Describe the role and qualifications of the PI, co-investigators, and other members of the team for whom funding is requested

Section 3. Project Milestones (1 Page)

  • Provide a list of scientific and organizational milestones over the 2-year period
  • Identify the specific goals and metrics for Phase 1 and for the completed project
  • Year 1 milestones must include significant progress toward developing a project proposal to an NCI recognized funding agency. Submission of collaborative publications is highly encouraged.
  • Year 2 milestones should include submission of collaborative publications. Submission of additional collaborative proposals is highly encouraged. The CCIL may assist the team, when feasible, in assembling the proposal and obtaining external reviews prior to submission.
  • Evidence of substantive collaboration (including periodic joint meetings, workshops, and publications) must be prominent in the proposal and details presented in the Year 1 progress report.

Section 4. References (1 Page)

  • Include titles of papers

Section 5. Budget and Budget Justification (1 Page)

  • Provide a budget estimate, with narrative justification that does not exceed $100,000 in funding for Year 1 and up to $100,000 in support for Year 2. Researchers should divide estimates into major expense categories (e.g., personnel, equipment/use fees, supplies, support). PIs should also specify the anticipated utilization and costs of CCIL Shared Resources. Expenses for use of external shared resources in lieu of campus facilities must be specifically identified, justified, and approved.
  • Indirect costs and salaries for the PIs are not permissible.

Review Criteria

Reviewers will evaluate each criterion on a scale of 1-9, consistent with the common practice for NIH applications.

Significance

Does the project address an important problem or a critical barrier to progress in the field? Is there a strong scientific premise for the project? If the aims of the project are achieved, how will scientific knowledge or technical capabilities be improved? How will successful completion of the aims change the concepts, methods, technologies, treatments, services, or preventative interventions that drive the field of cancer research?  How will this project contribute to the CCIL scientific program(s), and support and advance the goals of the CCIL?

Investigator(s)/Research Team

Are the PIs, collaborators, and other researchers well suited to the project? If the PI is an Early Stage Investigator and/or in the early stages of their independent career, do they have appropriate experience and training? For this collaborative project, do the investigators have complementary and integrated expertise that spans the themes of the CCIL programs?

Innovation

Does the proposal seek to shift current cancer research paradigms by utilizing novel theoretical concepts, approaches or methodologies, instrumentation, or interventions?

Approach

Are the overall strategies, methodologies, and analyses well-reasoned and appropriate to accomplish the specific aims of the project? Have the investigators presented strategies to ensure a rigorous and unbiased approach, as appropriate for the work proposed? Are potential problems, alternative strategies, and benchmarks for success presented?

Milestones

Are milestones provided that ensure a high likelihood of progress? How likely is the formulation and submission of a multi-PI project application to a funding agency?

Previous Seed Funding Program Projects

2024 Seed Grant Projects

Sister-Pore-Repair Dissects DNA Repair Pathways and Hotspot Distribution Among Different Cancers and Treatments

Principal Investigator

  • Huanyu Qiao, Associate Professor, Comparative Biosciences

Research Team

  • Lin-Feng Chen, Professor, Biochemistry
  • Wenan Qiang, Professor, Northwestern Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Kimberly Selting, Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine

Multiscale High-Content Cancer Imaging to Identify Molecular Signatures in Drug-Tolerant Cancer Cells

Principal Investigator

  • Yang Liu, Professor, Bioengineering

Research Team

  • Hongqiang Ma, Research Assistant Professor, Bioengineering
  • Chitra Subramanian, Research Associate Professor, Bioengineering

    A High Throughput Stiffness Sensor for Testing Efficacy of Chemo and CAR-T Cell Therapy for Pancreatic Cancer

    Principal Investigator

    • Taher Saif, Professor, Mechanical Sciences & Engineering

    Research Team

    • Hua Wang, Assistant Professor, Materials Science & Engineering

    Imaging Intratumoral Heterogeneity in Breast Cancer Cells Across Epithelial to Mesenchymal Phenotypes by Targeting Submicron Organelle Specific Small-Molecule Chemical Landscape

    Principal Investigator

    • Ashok Samuel, Specialized Faculty, Bioengineering

    Research Team

    • Susan Leggett, Assistant Professor, Bioengineering
    • Jonathan Sweedler, Professor, Chemistry

    Reprogram the Tumor Microenvironment by Targeting Brd4 to Improve Cancer Immunotherapy

    Principal Investigator

    • Lin-Feng Chen, Professor, Biochemistry

    Research Team

    • Erik Nelson, Associate Professor, Molecular & Integrative Physiology
    • Andrew Smith, Professor, Bioengineering
    • Hua Wang, Assistant Professor, Materials Science & Engineering

    Targeting Macrophage Trem2 with AAVs using uPAR as Homing Target for Glioblastoma Gene Therapy

    Principal Investigator

    • Samy Meroueh, Professor, Bioengineering

    Research Team

    • Timothy Fan, Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine
    • Thomas Gaj, Assistant Professor, Bioengineering

    2023 Seed Grant Projects

    Targeting Membrane Phospholipid Remodeling As a Novel Therapy for Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis-Associated Hepatocellular Carcinoma

    Principal Investigator

    • Bo Wang, Assistant Professor, Comparative Biosciences

    Research Team

    • David Sarlah, Associate Professor, Chemistry

    Identification of Potential Diagnostic and Therapeutic Targets of Iron Metabolism in Head and Neck Cancer

    Principal Investigator

    • Chitra Subramanian, Research Associate Professor, Carle Illinois College of Medicine

    Research Team

    • Mark Cohen, Professor, Carle Illinois College of Medicine
    • Zeynep Madak-Erdogan, Associate Professor, Food Science & Human Nutrition

      Leverage of Biomaterial-Based Platforms in Cancer Neuroscience: Models for Multimodal Study of Radiotherapeutic Response in Brain Tumors

      Principal Investigator

      • Taher Saif, Professor, Mechanical Sciences & Engineering

      Research Team

      • Hua Wang, Assistant Professor, Materials Science & Engineering

      Imaging Intratumoral Heterogeneity in Breast Cancer Cells Across Epithelial to Mesenchymal Phenotypes by Targeting Submicron Organelle Specific Small-Molecule Chemical Landscape

      Principal Investigator

      • Sara Pedron Haba, Specialized Faculty, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering

      Research Team

      • Catherine Best-Popescu, Assistant Professor, Bioengineering
      • Kimberly Selting, Associate Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine

      Imaging-Based Biomarkers to Predict Glioma Immunotherapy Response

      Principal Investigator

      • Edward Roy, Associate Professor, Molecular & Integrative Physiology

      Research Team

      • Wawrzyniec Dobrucki, Associate Professor, Bioengineering
      • David Kranz, Professor, Biochemistry
      • Fan Lam, Assistant Professor, Bioengineering
      • Andrew Smith, Professor, Bioengineering

      2022 Seed Grant Projects

      A Molecular Lego Kit for Kinase Inhibitors

      Principal Investigator

      • Martin Burke, Professor, Chemistry

      Research Team

      • Emad Tajkhorshid, Professor, Biochemistry

      Targeting the Bidirectional Crosstalk Between Gut Microbial Metabolism and Bile Acids to Alleviate Intestinal and Liver Tumorigenesis

      Principal Investigator

      • Christopher Gaulke, Assistant Professor, Pathobiology

      Research Team

      • Sayeepriyadarshini Anakk, Associate Professor, Molecular & Integrative Physiology
      • Collin Kieffer, Assistant Professor, Microbiology
      • Bo Wang, Assistant Professor, Comparative Biosciences

      Engineering Mechanical and Chemical Gradients to Control Cancer Cell Metastasis

       Principal Investigator

      • Catherine Murphy, Professor, Chemistry

      Research Team

      • Taher Saif, Professor, Mechanical Sciences and Engineering

      Versatile Redox Detection of a-Glycosylated Proteins in Blood, a Potential Universal Biomarker for Robust Cancer Detection

      Principal Investigator

      • Joaquin Rodriguez Lopez, Associate Professor, Chemistry

      Research Team

      • Brian Cunningham, Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering
      • Zeynep Madak-Erdogan, Associate Professor, Food Science and Human Nutrition

      Molecular Dynamics Modeling of Target Recycling Amplification for Ultrasensitive Detection of RNA-based Cancer Biomarkers

      Principal Investigator

      • Emad Tajkhorshid, Professor, Biochemistry

      Research Team

      • Brian Cunningham, Electrical and Computer Engineering

      Optogenetic Modulation of the Tumor Microenvironment to Improve Cancer Immunotherapy

      Principal Investigator

      • Kai Zhang, Associate Professor, Biochemistry

      Research Team

      • Erik Nelson, Molecular and Integrative Physiology

      2021 Seed Grant Projects

      Delineating the Role of Orc6 in Genome Surveillance and Cancer Progression

      Principal Investigator

      • Supriya Prasanth, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology

      Research Team

      • Satish K. Nair, Department of Biochemistry

      FORce Control of Cancer Tumor μEnvironment (FORCE)

      Principal Investigator

      • M. Taher Saif, Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering

      Research Team

      • Kimberly Selting, Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine
      • Kannanganattu V. Prasanth, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology
      • Hyunjoon Kong, Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering

      High-Resolution Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging for Adaptive Glioblastoma Multiforme Patient Treatment

      Principal Investigator

      • Hua Li, Department of Bioengineering

      Research Team

      • Fan Lam, Department of Bioengineering
      • Zhi-Pei Liang, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
      • Mark Anastasio, Department of Bioengineering
      • Paul Arnold, Department of Neurosurgery (Carle Foundation Hospital)
      • Daniel Barnett, Carle Cancer Institute

      Lipid Droplet Packing: A New Target to Interfere with the Progress of Human Hepatocellular Carcinoma

      Principal Investigator

      • Cecilia Leal, Department of Materials Science & Engineering

      Research Team

      • Sayee Anakk, Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology

      Multi-shape 3D Hanging Drop Array for Cancer Drug-screening

      Principal Investigator

      • Rashid Bashir, Department of Bioengineering

      Research Team

      • Panagiotis Z. Anastasiadis, Department of Cancer Biology (Mayo Clinic – Jacksonville, FL)
      • George Vasmatzis, Department of Molecular Medicine (Mayo Clinic – Rochester, MN)
      • Andrew Smith, Department of Bioengineering
      • Joon Kong, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
      • Jie Chen, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology

      Quantitative Ultrasound for Detection of Lymph Node Metastasis from Oral Melanoma & to Document Tumor Response to Stereotactic Radiosurgery in Dogs as a Large Animal Model of Metastatic Cancer

      Principal Investigator

      • Kimberly Selting, Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine

      Research Team

      • Audrey Billhymer, Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine
      • Michael Oelze, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
      • Rita Miller, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

      Stable Therapeutic Antibody Expression for Cancer Immunotherapy by Liver-directed Gene Editing

      Principal Investigator

      • Shannon Sirk, Department of Bioengineering

      Research Team

      • Thomas Gaj, Department of Bioengineering
      • Zeynep Madak-Erdogan, Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition
      • Pablo Perez-Pinera, Department of Bioengineering

      Workflows and Tools for Visualizing Tumor Phylogenies in Metastatic Breast Cancer

      Principal Investigator

      • Mohammed El-Kebir, Department of Computer Science

      Research Team

      • Zeynep Madak-Erdogan, Department of Food Science & Human Nutrition
      • Charles Blatti, National Center for Supercomputing Applications
      • Colleen Bushell, National Center for Supercomputing Applications
      • Lisa Gatzke, National Center for Supercomputing Applications
      • Matthew Berry, National Center for Supercomputing Applications

      The Role of the Urinary Sterolbiome in Prostate Cancer Risk

      Principal Investigator

      • Jason Ridlon, Department of Animal Sciences

      Research Team

      • H. Rex Gaskins, Department of Animal Sciences
      • Joseph Irudayaraj, Department of Bioengineering
      • John Erdman, Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition

      2020 Seed Grant Projects

      Using Anticancer Drug-Induced Immune Cell Activation to Target Ovarian Cancer for Eradication

      Principal Investigator

      • David Shapiro, Professor, Biochemistry

      Research Team

      • Erik Nelson, Assistant Professor, Molecular and Integrative Physiology
      • Georgina Cheng, Clinical Assistant Professor, Carle Illinois College of Medicine

      Elucidating the Role of Minor Cannabinoids on Immune Cell Activation Involved in Lung Cancer Metastatic Progression

      Principal Investigator

      • David Sarlah, Assistant Professor, Chemistry

      Research Team

      • Aditi Das, Associate Professor, Comparative Biosciences
      • Timothy Fan, Professor, Veterinary Clinical Medicine

      Establishment of a Spatially Resolved Noncoding RNA-mRNA Interactome Map for Breast Cancer Progression

      Principal Investigator

      • Hee-Sun Han, Assistant Professor, Chemistry

      Research Team

      • Saurabh Sinha, Professor, Computer Science
      • Prasanth Kumar V. Kannanganattu, Associate Professor, Cell and Developmental Biology

      Have a question? Contact us at cancercenter@illinois.edu