This year’s University Scholars tackling some of health’s biggest questions

Among the recipients are two researchers taking on infectious diseases in two very different ways.

May 3, 2016

microscope 1

Experts Featured In This Story

Sonia Anand
Sonia Anand

Professor

See Profile
Brian Coombes
Brian Coombes

Professor

See Profile
Steve Hranilovic
Steve Hranilovic

Vice-Provost & Dean of Graduate Studies

See Profile
Maikel Rheinstadter
Maikel Rheinstadter

Professor

See Profile

A diverse group of McMaster researchers have been named this year’s University Scholars.

The title is intended to recognize faculty members in mid-career who have already distinguished themselves as international scholars.

Among the recipients are two researchers tackling infectious diseases in two very different ways.

Biophysicist Maikel Rheinstadter uses the world’s most powerful in-house x-ray instrument dedicated to cell membrane research to study trans-membrane proteins – the first to be attacked by infectious diseases.

A technique developed in the Rheinstadter lab allows researchers to study membrane-embedded proteins under realistic physiological conditions, which could lead to better treatments for disease and the development of advanced materials and biosensors.

Health Sciences’ Brian Coombes is the Canada Research Chair in Infectious Disease Pathogenesis. He investigates how the organisms that enter our bodies and cause serious problems with our gastrointestinal systems infect humans, and how human and environmental activities influence the evolution of these infectious diseases.

Sonia Anand, a professor in Cardiology, focuses on the environmental and genetic determinants of vascular disease in populations of varying ancestral origins, women and cardiovascular disease.

Engineering’s Steve Hranilovic’s research interests are in optical wireless systems – wireless communications that use light.

His team develops information theory, signalling design and experimental prototypes for these systems operating in the infrared, visible and ultraviolet bands.

Each University Scholar will be awarded for a period of four years (beginning July 1, 2016), and will receive $15,000 per year provided by McMaster provost David Wilkinson and the applicable faculty dean.

A man in a suit and a beaded medallion stands in a wood-panelled area, with tree leaves behind him.

Q&A with Tristan Bomberry, medical student and health researcher

Tristan Bomberry on Indigenous health, the importance of bringing community perspectives into the research process, and work that's rooted in relationships.
A smiling woman doing a lunge on a yoga mat, holding hand weights.

Consistency over perfection, new resistance-training guidelines say

'The best resistance training program is the one you’ll actually stick with.'
A pregnant person's hands cradle their baby bump.

Nearly half of severe pregnancy complications happen before labour or after birth and are not monitored

While monitoring typically focuses on complications during labour and delivery, researchers found 45 per cent of dangerous events take place outside the delivery room, during pregnancy or in the six weeks postpartum.