The Dog Aging Project, which has been studying the biology of aging in nearly 50,000 companion dogs, is facing a funding challenge after the National Institutes of Health (NIH) did not renew their grant. The project's co-founders, Dr. Daniel Promislow and Dr. Matt Kaeberlein, discussed the project's future with STAT's @djbulbaczar, revealing a goal to raise up to $50 million to further research on aging in dogs and humans.
In case you missed it, listen to @DPromislow talk about the Dog Aging Project on the #1AShow on #WAMU #NPR #podcast š Listen to the full segment here: https://t.co/X4Vxq7vint #dogagingproject #dogscience #dogs #doghealth https://t.co/kjPontIqA9
With NIH funding set to run out, the founders of the Dog Aging Project look to raise $50 million to fund research related to the biology of aging in dogs and humans. https://t.co/oDWPR2TJ99
#DogAgingProject is looking for new sources of funding, with a long term goal of raising up to $50 million for research on the biology of aging in dogs, and humans, co-founders tell @djbulbaczar https://t.co/LPbKwxf9vc via @statnews
The @DogAgingProject is at a critical crossroads after the NIH declined to renew their grant funding. STAT's @djbulbaczar spoke to founders @DPromislow and @mkaeberlein about what lies ahead. https://t.co/zE9c62CKdV
Happy to be part of this paper on Golden Jackals. "Range-wide phylogeography of the golden jackals (Canis aureus) reveals spatial expansion and admixture with dogs at the expansion front" https://t.co/SM2CM9xaep
The project ā a beacon of hope for human longevity research ā has been studying the biology of aging in nearly 50,000 companion dogs. https://t.co/2FFdx2y9mY