ɬÀï·¬

Member News

Castiglione and Ingolia win Keck Foundation grants

ASBMB Staff
By ASBMB Staff
Sept. 1, 2025
Gianni Castiglione
Gianni Castiglione

Gianni Castiglione, with several colleagues at Vanderbilt University, and Nicholas Ingolia received at least $1 million from the to fund their research. The foundation supports projects that are distinctive and novel in their approach, as well as high-risk with the potential for transformative impact.

Castiglione is an assistant professor of biological sciences, ophthalmology and visual sciences at VU and a member of Vanderbilt’s Evolutionary Studies Initiative. explores new directions in aging research by collaborating with experts from a wide range of disciplines across the Vanderbilt campus. Castiglione’s grant will help further research in reverse engineering the life span of birds. He hopes to uncover biological mechanisms behind exceptional longevity that could one day help safely extend the lives of humans.

Nicholas Ingolia
Nicholas Ingolia

“We’re drawing on these different disciplines, and that’s promoted here, rather than trying to fit into a box,” he said in a VU .

Ingolia is a professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley. studies how cells control the translation and stability of messenger RNA in the cytosol, and how this regulation fulfills important biological functions. Ingolia’s grant will be used toward the study of systematic testing of sequence–function relationships in intrinsically disordered proteins.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
ASBMB Staff
ASBMB Staff

This article was written by a member or members of the ɬÀï·¬ staff.

Related articles

Meet the 2025 SOC grant awardees
Emmett Smith & Sudheesh Allikka Parambil
2025 PROLAB awardees announced
Marissa Locke Rottinghaus

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in People

People highlights or most popular articles

Designing life’s building blocks with AI
Profile

Designing life’s building blocks with AI

Dec. 2, 2025

Tanja Kortemme, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, will discuss her research using computational biology to engineer proteins at the 2026 ASBMB Annual Meeting.

Jordahl named Gilliam Fellow
Member News

Jordahl named Gilliam Fellow

Dec. 1, 2025

He will receive three years of funding to support his thesis research.

Bibel named assistant professor
Member News

Bibel named assistant professor

Nov. 24, 2025

She began her position at Loyola Marymount University in August 2025.

Unraveling the language of histones
Profile

Unraveling the language of histones

Nov. 20, 2025

Philip Cole presented his research on how posttranslational modifications to histones are involved in gene expression and how these modifications could be therapeutically targeted to treat diseases like cancer.

Cotruvo named Blavatnik award finalist
Member News

Cotruvo named Blavatnik award finalist

Nov. 17, 2025

He received a $15,000 prize and was honored at a gala in October.

Phosphatases and pupils: A dual legacy
Profile

Phosphatases and pupils: A dual legacy

Nov. 13, 2025

Yale professor Anton Bennett explores how protein tyrosine phosphatases shape disease, while building a legacy of mentorship that expands opportunity and fuels discovery in biochemistry and molecular biology.