Who we are

Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) support thematic, multidisciplinary centers that augment and strengthen institutional biomedical research capacity. This is accomplished by expanding and developing biomedical faculty research capability and enhancing research infrastructure, including the establishment of core facilities needed to carry out the objectives of a multidisciplinary, collaborative program.

History

These centers are led by NIH-funded investigators with expertise central to the theme of the grant proposal. The centers promote collaborative, interactive efforts among researchers with complementary backgrounds, skills and expertise. In some instances, COBRE support facilitates the development of new, disease-specific research centers or augments the capability of existing centers. Researchers supported through COBRE are expected to compete independently for external peer-reviewed grant support.

Each COBRE includes:

  1. principal investigator who is an established biomedical research scientist with expertise central to the research theme of the center, has an active research laboratory, has relevant peer​​-reviewed funding and has demonstrated administrative leadership and mentoring experience.
  2. Three to five individual research projects—each supervised by a single junior investigator—that stand alone but share a common thematic scientific focus.
  3. At least one mentor for each junior investigator, and a development and mentoring plan addressing how the junior investigators will transition to competitive grant support from NIH institutes and centers or other Federal or non-Federal agencies or organizations.

Phase 1

Phase I focuses on developing research infrastructure and providing junior investigators with formal mentoring and research project funding to help them acquire preliminary data and successfully compete for independent research grant support.

Phase 2

Phase II seeks to strengthen each center through further improvements in research infrastructure and continuing development and support of a critical mass of investigators with shared scientific interests. After 10 years of COBRE support, centers are expected to be able to compete successfully for other sources of research funding, such as program project or center grants from other NIH institutes and centers or other funding sources.

Phase 3

Phase III transitional centers provide support for maintaining COBRE research cores developed during Phases I and II, and sustain a collaborative, multidisciplinary research environment with pilot project programs and mentoring and training components.

Principal Investigator

Directors

MENTORED PROJECTS

Demetrio

Came to the UPR Medical Sciences Campus from the Massachusetts General Hospital / Harvard University in 2014.

Jose

Alpha-7 nAChR: Potential Therapeutic Target for Obesity Induced Cognitive Decline

Alfredo

Epigenetic control of transcription dynamics in long-term alcohol neuroadaptation

Amaya

Role of microglial α7nAChR in diet induced brain inflammation.

Andrew

Assistant Professor

Institute of Neurobiology, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus

Pilots Projects

Stefanie

Establishing an experimental model for probing the neural and molecular basis of abnormally repetitive behavior

Bianca

Polymorphism in neuroplasticity-related genes and its association with anxiety and depressive symptoms severity in Caribbean Hispanic patients

Jose

Role of Nicotinic Alpha 7 Autoreceptors in Striatal Cholinergic Interneurons

Steven

Chromatin remodeling during butterfly brain development

Our Facilities

Status of the COBRE Neuroplasticity Center at the MSRC 6th Floor: Offices

COBRE Neuroplasticity Center at the MSRC 6th Floor: Conference Room & Kitchenette

COBRE Neuroplasticity Center at the MSRC 6th Floor: Research Laboratories