UC Receives $4.3 Million From NIH For Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Center
CINCINNATI—Researchers at the University of Cincinnati (UC) have been awarded a five-year, $4.3 million renewal grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to continue work at the university's Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Center (MMPC) in Reading, Ohio.
The MMPC is a NIH-sponsored resource that provides experimental testing services to scientists studying diabetes, obesity, diabetic complications and other metabolic diseases in mice; UC is one of two of the original sites nationally to receive the renewed funding.
"The grant is a great point of pride for my team and the university. By awarding this grant, the NIH recognizes that our contribution to diabetes and obesity research is strong and that our staff is committed to promoting research for investigators across the country," says the center's director Patrick Tso, PhD, Mary Emery Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at the UC College of Medicine.
At the center, researchers observe and report the various metabolic and physiological functions of genetically-engineered mice sent to UC from research institutions worldwide.
"We don't generate the genetically modified mouse and we don't claim any credit for the outcomes," Tso says, citing the centers purpose as a way for investigators, especially young investigators with limited research funding, to conduct sophisticated phenotyping investigation in areas such as diabetes, obesity and related metabolic diseases or conditions at a fraction of the cost.
The MMPC program was established by the NIH for said purpose in 2001 to form a consortium of four centers including UC, from within the U.S., both NIH and non-NIH funded. UC's NIH funding was renewed at NIH on March 14, 2016, and of the original four centers, UC and Vanderbilt University are the only two centers to have received continuous NIH funding. The consortium currently consists of five centers.
The NIH grant award cites the UC MMPC as a "highly successful MMPC, which has been thriving under the strong leadership of Dr. Patrick Tso" and judged the overall merit of UC's application to be "Outstanding to Excellent."
"The College of Medicine is proud to have such an outstanding, talented group of investigators that not only perform their own cutting edge research, but also facilitate investigation and discovery by faculty around the country. We are grateful to Dr. Tso for his exceptional leadership in sustaining this valuable center," says Melanie Cushion, PhD, senior associate dean of research at the College of Medicine.
Other members of the UC center include: Sean Davidson, PhD, professor, Philip Howles, PhD, associate professor, Min Liu, PhD, professor, Laura Woollett, PhD, professor, all in the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine's Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine's and Steven Benoit, PhD, associate professor, James Herman, PhD, professor, Yvonne Ulrich-Lai, PhD, associate professor, Theresa Reyes, associate professor, Stephen Woods, PhD, professor emeritus, all in the college's Department of Psychiatry of Behavioral Neuroscience.
Tags
Related Stories
UC expert weighs in on current MASH treatment approaches
June 5, 2026
As MedCentral recently reported, pending broader pharmacologic approvals for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), lifestyle modifications remain the go-to intervention.
At least two weather patterns increase headaches, UC study suggests
June 4, 2026
University of Cincinnati physicians and collaborators identified two specific weather patterns that increase headache and migraine risk and found the preventive medication fremanezumab (Ajovy) can reduce weather‑associated headaches. The findings will be presented at the American Headache Society Annual Scientific Meeting in Orlando.
UC researcher secures $3.3M grant to study microplastics’ impact on heart
June 2, 2026
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences awarded a $3.3M grant to University of Cincinnati researcher Hong‑Sheng Wang, PhD, to study how microplastics and nanoplastics affect cardiovascular health.