Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Basic Sciences Board of Visitors

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Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Basic Sciences Board of Visitors VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE BASIC SCIENCES BOARD OF VISITORS Table of Contents Agenda....................................................................2 Directions/Logistics..............................................4 Board Member Profiles........................................5 Basic Sciences Leadership Profiles....................12 Basic Sciences Department Chairs...................15 Development & Alumni Relations Staff...........24 Bylaws...................................................................26 Recent Basic Scieinces News Articles...............29 — 1 — Agenda November 29th, 2018 6:30 p.m. Opening reception, dinner Henrietta Red, 1200 4th Avenue N, Nashville, TN November 30th, 2018 Business Meeting, AM Briefing Sessions 7:45 a.m. Light breakfast Medical Research Building III, Room U1202 Vanderbilt campus, Nashville, TN 8:15 a.m. Start of business meeting, call to order and introductions, Dean Larry Marnett Remain in conference room 8:30 a.m. Dean’s state of the school address, Dean Larry Marnett “Vision for Biomedical Research at Vanderbilt” 9:15 a.m. Briefing on Vanderbilt University, Chair, Board of Trust, Bruce Evans 9:45 a.m. Faculty research showcase, briefing for board members, Dean Larry Marnett Erin Calipari, Pharmacology, “Defining the Neural Signatures of Drug Addiction” Charles Sanders, Biochemistry, “A Basic Sciences Approach to Personalized Medicine” Carrie Jones, Pharmacology, “Development of M5 Muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor Negative Allosteric Modulators for the Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder” William Tansey, Cell and Developmental Biology, “Targeting MYC” 10:45 a.m. Networking break 11:00 a.m. Tour of facilities, laboratories with doctoral student tour guides 11:45 a.m. Graduate student/postdoc research showcase and mentoring sessions Medical Research Building III, Lobby — 2 — Business Meeting Continued, PM Working Sessions 12:45 p.m. Working lunch, report out assessment of VBS’s capabilities, Board of Visitors Members Medical Research Building III, Room U1202 1:30 p.m. Networking break 1:45 p.m. Speed-advising session with academic leadership of school 2:30 p.m. Networking break 3:15 p.m. Consultation with full board, “Experts’ Advice on Positioning of VBS,” Dean Larry Marnett 1. What makes Vanderbilt and the Basic Sciences unique? 2. What is most intriguing and exciting about the School? How do we tell that story? 3. Ideas on marketing, communication and making connections with industry? 4:00 p.m. Closing session: Report out from board members on action items, Dean Larry Marnett 4:30 p.m. Meeting adjourns — 3 — Directions/Logistics Hotel The block of rooms for BoV members is at the Kimpton Aertson. It is located at 2021 Broadway, at the inter- sections of 21st and Broadway, across from the Vanderbilt Law School. Parking is in their garage. Dinner Henriette Red is a seafood and oyster restaurant (with several non-seafood items) in the Germantown neighborhood. It is located at 1200 Fourth Avenue, North, at the corner of Madison Street. We have a pri- vate dining room reserved for the Board of Visitors. Meeting Location We will be convening on the Vanderbilt campus, in the Medical Research Building III. That is a high-rise building that borders 21st Street and is directly across from the University School of Nashville. It is bor- dered on one side by Medical Center North and the other by the Nursing School building. Access is avail- able through the main loading dock (to make finding it simple for everyone), and a student will be there to guide you in to the conference rooms. From the hotel and parking garage, you will be crossing 21st at Scarritt Place (by the CVS Pharmacy), then walking South toward the medical campus. See map below. Parking Parking spots will be reserved for BoV members at the Wesley Place Garage, which is off of 21st and down Scarritt Place (2043 Scarritt Place is the address for your GPS). As you enter the garage, go to the 2nd level, where spots are being held. A student will welcome you. Ground Transportation For everyone staying at the hotel, we will touch base with you as to whether you’d like to have shuttle service from the hotel to: a) the restaurants on Thursday night; b) the meeting room (MRBIII) on Friday morning; and c) the airport after the meeting on Friday. — 4 — Board Member Profiles Laurent Audoly, PhD, is the President and CEO of Kymera Therapeu- tics located in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Dr. Laurent joined Kymera from Pierre Fabre, where he was the Global Head of R&D and a managing partner at the PF fund for innovation. Laurent started his drug development career at Pfizer, where he led multiple discovery efforts in inflammation and immu- nology contributing to the identification of Xeljanz®. Subsequently, he held various strategic, business, leadership and operational roles at MedImmune, Merck, and Pieris, building global collaborations and therapeutic pipeline val- ue across oncology, autoimmunity, respiratory, neuropsychiatry, dermatology, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, contributing to the launch of multiple products currently on the market. He earned his PhD in Pharmacology from Vanderbilt University and was an American Heart Association postdoctoral fellow at Duke University. Dr. Laurent is a direct contributor on more than 70 peer-reviewed publications and patents. He also serves as a board member and advisor for multiple healthcare organizations worldwide to help accelerate the discovery and advancement of novel therapies for patients and their families. David L. Black, PhD, is currently a Clinical Associate Professor with appointments in Pharmacology and Pathology, Microbiology and Immunolo- gy at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Black earned his undergraduate degree from Loyola College in Baltimore and doctorate degree in Forensic Toxicology from the University of Maryland at Baltimore (1982). Dr. Black is a Fellow of the American Board of Forensic Toxicology (F-ABFT) and a Fellow of the American Institute of Chemists (FAIC). Dr. Black was Department Head and Director of Toxicology for Maryland Medical Laboratory, Inc. from 1982- 1986. He joined Vanderbilt University in 1986 as Assistant Professor with appointments in Pathology and Pharmacology. In 1990, Dr. Black founded Aegis Sciences Corporation where he served as Chairman and CEO until Oc- tober of 2016. Aegis served as a forensic chemical and drug testing labo- ratory specializing in Zero-Tolerance Drug Testing® (proprietary process), employee drug testing (SAMHSA), professional and amateur athlete drug testing (Doping Control), food/supplement analysis, pain management com- pliance testing, crime scene evidence analysis, driving under the influence of drugs and alcohol, and post-mortem evaluations. Dr. Black has served as Program Administrator for substance abuse programs for NASCAR, IndyCar and World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and as a consultant to Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) and the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA). He has also served as a consultant to major corporations for development of substance abuse prevention policies and testing programs. He has testified extensively in local, state, national and international courts as an expert witness regarding drug use and testing programs. He is author/co-author of many peer reviewed published scientific papers in various scientific journals. Dr. Black is also Founder and President of Ebon-Falcon, LLC (a commercial real estate company), and Founder and President of “2nd Vote” (a research organization monitoring Corporate social activism). Dr. Black served in the U.S. Marine Corps (1966-69) and in combat in Vietnam (1968-69) and is a 10% disabled veteran. Personal in- terests include church and community activities, Rotary International, Guatemala Medical/Dental/Vision Mission Trips. Dr. Black has been a Board member of the Nashville Healthcare Council and Life Sciences of Tennessee. Dr. Black lives in Gallatin, Tennessee, with his wife US Congressman Diane Black (TN 6th District), and they have three children and six grandchildren. — 5 — Andrea Carnegie, PhD, is the Chief Operating Officer of the North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute. Prior to joining NC TRACS, she was the Director of Administrative Operations at the University of Illinois at the Chicago Center for Clinical and Translational Science. From 2007 to 2009, she was the administrative manager of the Oregon Retinal Degeneration Center at the Casey Eye Institute, Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, where she worked directly in clinical trial design and operations. Dr. Carnegie received a BS in Biology at Emory and a PhD in Pharmacology from Vanderbilt University as well as completing postdoctoral fellowships at Oregon Health & Science University. Her basic science work was on intra- cellular signaling mechanisms and biogenic amine transport in cardiac and neuronal cells. She is also an Assistant Professor of Medicine, in the Division of Endocrinology & Metabolism. David Daniel, MD, is the Sr. VP and Chief Medical Officer of Bracket Global. In this role, Dr. Daniel provides overall scientific, clinical and strategic direction for Bracket’s services. Prior to joining Bracket, Dr. Daniel was the founder and President of Global Learning, LLC which was acquired by United BioSource Corporation in July 2006. He formerly served as Medical Director of the NIMH Neuroscience Center at Saint Elizabeth’s, Director of Clinical Trials for the Stanley Foundation, and was a founding Principal
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