The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, Janurary 27, 2014 - 3A 'I Schlissel kept lab at Berkley even after Brown move Research to take main stage Schlissel's final Ph.D candidate in California will graduate in May By AUSTEN HUFFORD Online Editor For many senior scientific researchers at universities, their days are spent writing grants and telling younger researchers what to do. Even though they are in charge of a lab, their actual lab time becomes nonexistent. But University President-elect Mark Schlissel continued to work in his lab and run experiments even as he climbed the academic ladder at the University of California, Berkeley. Schlissel has authored or co- authored more than 100 scien- tific papers in his nearly three decades of research. Much of his work has focused on how immune cells form from stem cells in bone marrow. When this process goes awry, cancers such as lymphoma and leukemia can develop. "Mark made seminal contri- butions to the understanding of the process," David Raulet, chair of the Berkeley Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology said in an interview Friday. His papers have appeared in Nature, which has been dubbed the most influential scientific journal, and his work has been cited almost 9,000 times, accord- ing to Google Scholar. He has both a M.D. and Ph.D. from Johns Hop- kins University. B lymphocytes, a large focus of his research, form continuously in the bone marrow and create antibodies. They are also known as B cells and are interesting for scientists because they are cre- ated by splitting and recombin- ing different sections of genetic material. This process results in slightly different antibodies each time, creating diversity and help- ing the body fight off a wide array of diseases. Schlissel's work focused spe- cifically on the formation of two proteins called RAG-1 and RAG- 2. These proteins act as a sort of molecular scissors, according to David Schatz, a Yale University immunobiology professor who helped discover the proteins. The Rag-1 and Rag-2 cut the genes and allow them to be assembled into a functional configuration that will create antibodies. Schlissel was interested in how this cutting process was targeted to the right location. "Mark was recognized as one of the leaders in the world in the study of B cell development and this recombination," Schatz said. Even as a provost at Brown University, Schlissel continued to publish papers, producing five in 2013. During his time at Brown, he continued to work with his Ph.D candidates at Berkeley to help them finish. He would fly back monthly and Skype with them regularly, according to Kwan Chow, who was one of his students and now is a postdoc- toral fellow at the University of Washington. Schlissel's head may be in administration, but his heart is still in research. "This was his life," Chow said. "He ran a lab. Two years doing administrative work isn't going to erase that." Schlissel will return to roots in science following Coleman's retirement By RACHEL PREMACK Daily News Editor In the realm of research funding, University President- elect Mark Schlissel has a tough act to follow. To be precise, a $581 million act - how much the research budget has bal- looned since University Presi- dent Mary Sue Coleman took office in August 2002. Research expenditures have doubled in the past decade, according to David Lampe, executive director of research communications. The Uni- versity is regarded as a one of the nation's premiere research insitution, second only to The Johns Hopkins University in total research expenditure. Givenslashesinstate and fed- eral funding, though, research funding will be at at significant risk in future budget cycles. In an interview Friday, S. Jack Hu, interim vice president for research, said financing the University's massive research enterpriseisthebiggestlong-term challenge the president-elect will face. Hu was selected last year to fill the role vacated by Stephen Forrest, who returned to full- time researching and teaching after overseeing the University's research portfolio for sevenyears. During Forrest's tenure, the University's research expenditures increased from $800 million in 2008toover $1.3 billion lastyear. Still, Schlissel said at a press conference Friday that he was optimistic about maintaining or increasingthe financingthe Uni- versity's massive research enter- prise is the budget over time. "I think there's enough sup- port in the leadership of our country that, as our economy recovers, as our economy is investing in the future, a big part of which is funding discovery and research will recover as well." From East Coast student to public institute president Schlissel, who holds a M.D. and Ph.D from The Johns Hop- kins University, has extensive research experience in medical- related fields. Before becoming provost at Brown University, he was dean of biological sciences at the University of California, Berkeley during the system's severe budget crisis of 2009 to 2010. Mark Richards, execu- tive dean of mathematical and physical sciences at Berkeley, said Schlissel was involved in a campus wide effort to protect as many of Berkeley's academic resources as possible during the recession's onset. "He was working with man- aging a terrible budget situa- tion," Richards said. Currently, 11 percent of Berkeley's funding is from the state of California, compared to 17 percent in Michigan. Richards added that Schlis- sel led new research initiatives in the biological sciences in collaboration with the Univer- sity of California, San Francis- co Medical Campus. As Brown University Pro- vost, Schlissel led the estab- lishment of the School of Public Health, the expansion of the School of Engineering and Brown's STEM education initiative, Brown University President Christina Paxson wrote in a letter to the univer- sity community. "He has been integrally involved in space and capital planning efforts, guiding $200 million in investments to bol- ster the University's teaching, research and campus life infra- structure," Paxson wrote. Richards said his former col- league, whose office was next door when he was a dean at Berkeley, was a decisive leader. "Universities can be very change resistant," Richards said. "I would say he is a person who wants to lead an organiza- tion fairly aggressively into the future rather than preserving whatever is there." Research funding: Paltry or powerful? Such a maverick may be nec- essary to confront the uncertain funding situation looming overthe University's researchportfolio. The fiscal year 2013 research budget was a record $1.33 bil- lion, according to Lampe. That cycle, the National Science Foundation, National Aeronau- tics and Space Administration and other federal departments all increased their sponsorship of university research, a Uni- versity press release stated. The National Institutes of Health, though, decreased their support for University research. The situation may change as with a $1 billion increase to the NIH's funding compared to before the sequester in FY2013, according to Matt Williams, press secretary for Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich). However, the amount allocated to the NIH is not guaranteed to any university, Williams said, so an overall increase in NIH funds does not guarantee an increase for the University's. One potential solution to off- set a decline in public support is to seek funding from private foundations and companies - an avenue that Schlissel praised in his remarks Friday. "I remember reading that a very significant portion of the research dollars spent here were raised from non-govern- mental sources as well, founda- tions and donors, in addition to relying on the federal govern- ment," he said. A new means to money one conduit is industry sup- port, Lampe said. He high- lighted the University's growing involvement in energy and transportation research, like the public-private partnership in the Mobility Transformation Center. Lampe described the push to identify growth areas in which government and industry both seek research. "We are being flexible in see- ing what priorities the federal government and industry have," Lampe said. "We are matching where we see our strengths and where they match with what industry needs." Lampe added that the Uni- versity continues to empha- size its "great strengths" in the health system, which is also the biggest part of federally sup- ported research. Schlissel also led new research initiatives in the bio- logical science at Berkeley, Richards said, and was called a "seminal" researcher in his field. "He listens to arguments, he thinks about things and he makes decisions," Richards said. "And I think a university president has to do that." A university president, how- ever, takes a bigger picture approach to research. Lampe described Coleman as an advo- cate for the importance of uni- versity research. "Research is closely coupled with the education process here," Lampe said, "It's integral with graduate education and increasingly so with under- graduate. It is through our research that we are able to make our students to be the innovators that are economi- cally successful and competi- tive." I