| Literature DB >> 23921333 |
Xuebiao Yao1, Dangsheng Li, Gang Pei.
Abstract
An interactive, intellectual environment with good funding opportunities is essential for the development and success of basic research. The fast-growing economy and investment in science, together with a visionary plan, have attracted foreign scholars to work in China, motivated world-class Chinese scientists to return and strengthened the country's international collaborations. As a result, molecular and cell biology research in China has evolved rapidly over the past decade.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23921333 PMCID: PMC7097130 DOI: 10.1038/nrm3638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol ISSN: 1471-0072 Impact factor: 94.444
Figure 1(Timeline): The order in which key institutes, funding bodies and societies were formed in China
Figure 2Map of representative institutions under the different MCB research programmes in China.
Historically, there are two main streams of molecular and cell biology (MCB) research programmes in China. One pipeline is orchestrated by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). CAS includes 20 institutes studying biological sciences at which diverse subject areas are being investigated. The second avenue is governed by the Ministry of Education (MOE), and this includes several universities. The newly established National Institute of Biological Sciences (NIBS) represents the third system. The map illustrates the geographic locations of five representative institutions under CAS (orange), four representative universities under the MOE (white) and the NIBS (purple).
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Funding sources supporting molecular cell biology research in China
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| Agency | Type of funding |
|---|---|
|
| |
| NSFC | Initiated by the principal investigator |
| NSFC | Collaboration between multiple principle investigators |
| MOST | National Key Basic Research Programme (973 project) |
| MOST | National Key Basic Research Special Programmes on stem cells, protein science, nano materials, reproduction and development |
| MOST | National High-Tech Research and Development Programme (863 project) |
| MOH | Translational Medicine Consortium |
|
| |
| CAS | Hundred Talent (3 years) |
| NSFC | Outstanding Young Scientist Fund (3 years) |
| MOE | Cheung Kong Chair Professorship (5 years) |
| Central government | Thousand Talent (5 years) |
| Central government | Young Thousand Talent (5 years) |
|
| |
| CAS | Einstein Guest Professorship (1–2 weeks per year) |
| MOE | Cheung Kong Guest Professorship (2 months per year) |
| Central government | Foreign Thousand Talent (9 months per year) |
| NSFC | International collaboration programmes (such as the NSFC–NIH collaboration grant) (generally 5 years) |
CAS, Chinese Academy of Science; MOE, Ministry of Education; MOH, Ministry of Health; MOST, Ministry of Science and Technology; NIH, National Institutes of Health; NSFC, Natural Science Foundation of China.
*Length of funding is given in brackets.
Figure 3Participants in the Second International Conference on Cellular Dynamics and Chemical Biology.
This meeting, held at the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) in Hefei, China, in November 2010, brought together researchers working in the disciplines of photonics, chemistry and biology. The conference covered six topics: cell cycle and circadian rhythms, cell division and genomic stability, epigenetic and epigenomic stability, the chemical biology of enzymes, cell plasticity and homeostasis, as well as new technologies. The image is reproduced, with permission, from Zhen Guo, School of Life Sciences, USTC, Hefei, China.
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