BEIJING, Oct. 28 -- Two Chinese scientists have
received 100,000 U.S. dollars each from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
for their novel ideas on fighting tuberculosis (TB) and HIV/AIDS.
The grants for Gao Qian from Fudan University and
Chen Zhiwei from University of Hong Kong are among 106 offered to explore bold
and largely unproven ways to improve global health, the foundation's China
office said Monday.
The grants mark the first round of funding from Grand
Challenges Explorations, a five-year 100 million dollars initiative to help
lower the barriers for testing innovative ideas in global health.
Gao Qian, at Fudan's medical college, said two of his
students came up with the ideas focusing on researching the role of MicroRNA - a
short single-stranded RNA molecule that is now recognized as playing an
important role in gene regulation - in the transition from latent to activated
tuberculosis.
Chen Zhiwei, director of the AIDS Institute at the
University of Hong Kong Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, is aiming for an AIDS
vaccine capable of inducing neutralizing antibodies against HIV-1 sexual
transmission, the major risk factor in the spread of AIDS.
(Source: China Daily)