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Harvard professor turns to private equity to counter Trump research cuts

Harvard professor turns to private equity to counter Trump research cuts

Boston Globe6 days ago

Under the deal announced Monday, İş Private Equity, a Turkish firm, has committed $39 million to a laboratory run by Gökhan Hotamışlıgil, a professor of genetics and metabolism at the T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The firm, which is a branch of Turkey's İşbank Group, also plans to invest an undisclosed amount of money in any drug candidates that come out of Hotamışlıgil's laboratory and are moved into a new biotech called Enlila.
It's a relatively modest deal, in the scope of investment banking. But the collaboration provides much-needed capital at a time when the model for funding scientific research has been thrown into chaos.
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In the first six months of the Trump administration, government officials terminated at least
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In all,
Plans for the İş Private Equity collaboration pre-date the Trump administration's science grant retrenchment. Talks began last year, when Hotamışlıgil traveled to Turkey — where he was born and attended university — for a symposium celebrating İşbank Group's centennial. The event was filled with Nobel laureates, entrepreneurs, and others discussing the future of Turkey.
Hotamışlıgil gave a presentation at the event detailing his experience as a scientist and his decades-long work exploring fatty acid binding proteins, or FABPs. This hormone is produced in fat cells and secreted into the blood, where it interacts with proteins to form a substance called fabkin. Elevated levels of fabkin are linked to obesity,
The presentation caught the attention of İşbank's chief executive.
Financing scientific research has always been a challenge, as Hotamışlıgil detailed to the İşbank Group event crowd. It's not easy to explore scientific unknowns while scrounging up grants and other capital.
'In the past, we were complaining about the principles of funding, which overwhelmingly tilted toward more conservative, more guaranteed outcomes… Then, suddenly, there was no funding,' Hotamışlıgil told STAT. Even now, Hotamışlıgil said he is shocked that a country like the U.S. would pull back its scientific financing so drastically, given how much success it's lent to large corporations and research institutions that elicit international envy.
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The federal cuts have plunged many Chan School staff and faculty into cycles of grief and anger, said Amanda Spickard, the associate dean for research strategy and external affairs. They're now emerging from the daze to brainstorm new ways of replacing lost research dollars.
In a letter sent out last week, the school's dean of faculty, Andrea Baccarelli, laid out an initial slate of strategies for replacing lost funding, including asking corporate partners to make $100,000 gifts to support Ph.D. students and post-doctorate fellows. The idea has been well-received by executives in need of highly trained employees, said Sarah Branstrator, managing director of academic strategy and research partnerships at the Chan School.
School officials are also hopeful that the İşbank collaboration could be the first of multiple privately financed labs.
There have been isolated examples in which investment firms have financed specific university centers or research projects, often for preferential access to any new scientific innovations that come out of the laboratories.
Just across the Charles River from the Chan School, Harvard's Wyss Institute has spent the last five years working with an affiliate of the science-focused VC firm Northpond Ventures. Northpond initially committed $12 million to the alliance in 2020, and has made
New York investment firm Deerfield Management has been much more aggressive in funding early-stage research. It has committed around $390 million to collaborations with
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Hotamışlıgil's lab may be a unique case, as metabolism has become a hot area of drug development, thanks to the success of Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk's GLP-1 weight loss medications. Obesity-focused startups are still raking in
Meanwhile, other areas of public health research, like infectious diseases and vaccines, are a
'It is probably too optimistic to say that government funding could completely be replaced. Government funding is really crucial to keep science as its engine. Having said that, for the school faculty, there are incredible opportunities, in my view,' Hotamışlıgil said. '[This] gives some hope that there's also some alternative ways that we can support science.'

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Europe Frets About US Retreating From Region Ahead of NATO
Europe Frets About US Retreating From Region Ahead of NATO

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

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Europe Frets About US Retreating From Region Ahead of NATO

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'I'm not worried about that, but I'm absolutely convinced we will do that in a step-by-step approach,' Rutte said then. 'There will be no capability gaps in Europe because of this.' The White House referred questions to the Pentagon. 'The U.S. constantly evaluates force posture to ensure it aligns with America's strategic interests,' a defense official responded. The geopolitical shift is likely to have enormous consequences for the 32-member alliance, which is weathering its greatest challenge since it became the bulwark against Soviet power in the decades after World War II. European militaries long reliant on American hard power will have to fill the gap as Washington scales back. If a troop reduction focuses on efficiency, it would be far less problematic for Europeans than one that hits critical assets and personnel that Europe couldn't replace immediately, according to one European diplomat. 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Hundreds protest in The Hague against NATO, days before the Dutch city hosts alliance summit
Hundreds protest in The Hague against NATO, days before the Dutch city hosts alliance summit

Washington Post

time28 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Hundreds protest in The Hague against NATO, days before the Dutch city hosts alliance summit

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Before and After Images Show Impact of US Strikes on Iran Nuclear Site
Before and After Images Show Impact of US Strikes on Iran Nuclear Site

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Before and After Images Show Impact of US Strikes on Iran Nuclear Site

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. New satellite imagery shows large craters and ash at Iran's Fordow nuclear facility following U.S. airstrikes that President Donald Trump said had "totally obliterated" Tehran's major nuclear sites. The Context Trump confirmed late on Saturday that the U.S. had carried out "massive precision strikes" to take out Tehran's nuclear enrichment facilities and damage its ability to make a nuclear weapon. Fordow nuclear site in central Iran on Friday, prior to U.S. strikes on the complex on Saturday afternoon U.S. time. Fordow nuclear site in central Iran on Friday, prior to U.S. strikes on the complex on Saturday afternoon U.S. time. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies A view of the exterior of Fordow, a major nuclear site in central Iran on Sunday, after U.S. strikes on the facility on Saturday evening U.S. time. A view of the exterior of Fordow, a major nuclear site in central Iran on Sunday, after U.S. strikes on the facility on Saturday evening U.S. time. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies What To Know The U.S. struck Fordow, roughly 60 miles south of Tehran, as well as the Natanz complex to the southeast and Isfahan, southwest of Natanz, Trump said. The president hailed the attacks as a "spectacular military success," adding: "Iran's key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated." Experts said it was too early to tell exactly how much damage has been done to Iran's network of nuclear sites. General Dan Caine, the chairman of the U.S. joint chiefs of staff, said on Sunday morning that initial assessments of the operation dubbed Midnight Hammer indicated "all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction," but analysis was ongoing. Israel continued attacking Iran into Sunday, and Tehran launched fresh strikes on several Israeli cities. Satellite imagery published by space imagery firm Maxar on Sunday showed a number of large craters or holes at the top of the ridge, under which is the underground complex at Fordow. Ash from airstrikes covers much of the area, and several of the entrances to Fordow's tunnel network appear to be blocked with dirt, Maxar said. Images separately published by Planet Labs on Sunday also showed ash covering the area around Fordow. Fordow is built under a mountain, a facility that was secret until 2009 and Israel has been unable to destroy with its weapons. While Israel has carried out strikes on Iran's nuclear sites—including Natanz and Isfahan—since it started its campaign over a week ago, the U.S. is considered the only country able to reach the deeply buried sites like Fordow using B-2 bombers and "bunker buster" bombs. These huge bombs had never been used before in combat. A view of Fordow prior to U.S. airstrikes on the underground complex, taken on Thursday, June 19, 2025. A view of Fordow prior to U.S. airstrikes on the underground complex, taken on Thursday, June 19, 2025. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies Craters are visible and ash can be seen on the ridge at Fordow on Sunday, after U.S. strikes on the underground facility. Craters are visible and ash can be seen on the ridge at Fordow on Sunday, after U.S. strikes on the underground facility. Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies Caine told the media on Sunday morning that the U.S. had used a total of 14 30,000-pound GBU-57/B bombs against two nuclear target areas in Iran. Reports had suggested at least one GBU-57/B was fired on Natanz. A U.S. submarine launched more than 2 dozen Tomahawk cruise missiles against the aboveground facilities at Isfahan around 5 p.m. ET on Saturday, just before U.S. aircraft entered Iranian airspace. Washington used deception tactics and a host of fourth- and fifth-generation aircraft traveling ahead of B-2 bombers to sweep for Iranian fighter jets and air defenses, Caine said. At 6:40 p.m. ET, the first B-2 dropped two "bunker buster" bombs at Fordow, the chairman said. The rest of the munitions were dropped in the following 25 minutes, and Iran did not fire any shots at U.S. aircraft traveling in or out of Iran, Caine added. Caine said full damage assessments were still pending, but that "all three sites sustained extremely severe damage and destruction." The U.S. "achieved destruction of capabilities" at Fordow, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said. What People Are Saying U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, speaking alongside General Dan Caine on Sunday, said, "Iran's nuclear ambitions have been obliterated." What Happens Next Trump has threatened further strikes on Iran if Tehran does not negotiate a deal, while the country's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi called the American attacks "outrageous," promising "everlasting consequences."

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