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University of Utah Health Research

University of Utah Health Research

Higher Education

Salt Lake City, Utah 4,171 followers

Advancing science and medicine through innovation, passion, and collaboration.

About us

At University of Utah Health, our world-class researchers work together to tackle some of the toughest problems in health and medicine. With scientists down the hall from health care providers, and across the street from leading scholars in diverse fields, we’re uniquely positioned to turn big ideas into real solutions. From gene therapies to health apps to AI-driven diagnostics, we’re taking discoveries from bench to bedside and advancing care in clinics and communities to improve lives in Utah and beyond.

Website
https://uofuhealth.utah.edu/research
Industry
Higher Education
Company size
5,001-10,000 employees
Headquarters
Salt Lake City, Utah
Type
Educational

Locations

Employees at University of Utah Health Research

Updates

  • University of Utah Health Research reposted this

    Can controlling your blood pressure help protect your brain? That’s the question driving a new $21.6 million study now underway at University of Utah Health. Using the funds from a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant, researchers at University of Utah Health and their national partners are analyzing 40,000 blood samples from the 2015 SPRINT trial, one of the most important hypertension studies in the country. Their goal is to understand whether lowering blood pressure can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia. The study is now underway. Investigators held their kickoff meeting in December, and the team will soon be shipping samples to Banner Alzheimer’s Institute in Arizona, where advanced biomarker testing will take place. Initial results in the 5-year study are expected in early 2027. Dr. Adam Bress, professor of population health sciences at University of Utah Health, says this research could reshape how we approach screening, and treatment of cognitive decline. #BrainHealth #UtahResearch #DementiaPrevention #AlzheimerPrevention

  • Increasing paternal age has been linked to elevated health risks for the next generation, including higher risks of obesity and stillbirth. But what drives this increased risk remains unknown. Most research into this link focuses on how the DNA inside sperm changes with age. But sperm carries other molecules as well, including a diverse array of molecules called RNAs. Now, new research from University of Utah Health has shown that the RNA contents of sperm go through similar shifts over time in both mice and humans, which may lead to a rapid, dramatic shift at mid-life. What’s more, “old RNA” seems to change cells’ metabolism—potentially contributing to the health risks of having kids later in life. The Importance of RNA Previous work in Chen’s lab had established that RNA in sperm could be changed by a father’s environment, including diet, and that those changes could impact the next generation. But the kinds of RNA molecules that seemed to be most important were difficult to detect with standard techniques. Chen’s team developed an advanced RNA sequencing method, called PANDORA-seq, to “see” this previously undetectable world of sperm RNAs. When they used this new tool to analyze sperm in mice, the researchers spotted a pattern that traditional techniques couldn’t detect—a sharp, dramatic transition in sperm RNA contents in mice between 50 and 70 weeks of age. In addition to this “aging cliff,” they found what appeared to be a molecular clock. As males age, the proportions of certain sperm RNAs change progressively—longer fragments become more common, while shorter fragments become less common. And when they looked at RNA in human sperm, they found the same progressive shift. “At first glance, this finding seems counterintuitive,” Chen says. “For decades, we have known that as sperm age, their DNA becomes more fragmented and broken. One might expect RNA to follow this pattern. Instead, we found the opposite: specific sperm RNAs actually become longer with age.” These changes in RNA may affect offspring health in important ways, the results suggest. When the team introduced a cocktail of “old RNA” into mouse embryonic stem cells, which are biologically similar to early embryos, the cells displayed changes in gene expression associated with metabolism and neurodegeneration, potentially suggesting a mechanism by which RNA could impact the health of the next generation. Finding Unseen Patterns The researchers were only able to detect some of these changes when they looked at RNA from the sperm head alone—the part of the sperm that delivers its contents to the egg. The long tail of the sperm contains other RNA that obscured the pattern until now. Continue reading: https://bit.ly/4qy5VMI. The results are published in The EMBO Journal.

    • Left to right: Jiancheng Yu, author on the study; Xudong Zhang, PhD, co-first author on the study; Qi Chen, MD, PhD, co-senior author on the study. Image credit: Niki Tonks / University of Utah Health.
  • University of Utah Health Research reposted this

    Register for Research Tours today and find out what labs are interesting to you! Here is a look into the College of Health research labs! See below for available research tours for the Spring 2026 semester! Marriott Library – J. Willard Marriott Library January 29, 2026 · 11:00 AM Discover how to find scholarly sources and navigate research tools to shape your own research interests. As a bonus, spend time in the ProtoSpace and explore the VR Arena! Douglass & Maricq Lab – Department of Neurobiology February 10, 2026 · 2:30 PM · First Floor Lobby of BPRB Explore how neural circuits shape learning, memory, and behavior. STARS Lab – Department of Materials Science & Engineering March 5, 2026 · 11:30 AM · WBB 509 The STARS Lab uses high‑speed impact testing and advanced characterization techniques to study how processing influences material structure and performance. Shiri Lab – Interfacial & Transport Physics, Mechanical Engineering March 26, 2026 · 1:30 PM · MEK 2337 Learn how researchers investigate transport behavior at material interfaces to uncover new physical laws. Speech Acquisition Lab – Department of Linguistics April 3, 2026 · 10:00 AM · LNCO 2945 See how adults learn new sounds and how language backgrounds shape speech acquisition. 🔗 Register at the Link in bio!

  • University of Utah Health Research reposted this

    The Digital Health Initiative is thrilled to announce the fourth round of Digital Health Innovations seed grant program aimed at catalyzing new collaborations and innovative research in digital health. Pilot awards will be supported up to $50,000 with a potential additional $25,000 for projects that engage the Software Development & Systems Design Core (SD2C) as a development partner. Applications are due on March 16th, 2026 at 11:59 PM MST via InfoReady: https://lnkd.in/ezYJSAjY

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  • University of Utah Health Research reposted this

    TODAY! Our next Health Behavior Seminar Series from 12:00 - 1:00 PM in EHSEB 4100B. See below for our speaker name, talk title and flyer! “Adapting the Evidence-Based NET-Works Childhood Healthy Weight Intervention: Balancing fidelity and implementation challenges”   Nancy E. Sherwood, PhD Associate Dean for Research and Professor University of Minnesota

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