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How a UTSA biology professor is seeking cures and revolutionizing brain health

Two individuals in white coats work in a lab.
Two researchers work in the Hsieh Lab.
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Jenny Hsieh imagines a future without the fear of Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy or other brain disorders.

As the Semmes Foundation Distinguished Chair in Cell Biology, chair of the Neuroscience, Developmental and Regenerative Biology department, and director of the UTSA Brain Health Consortium, Hsieh has dedicated her life’s work to understanding, at the cellular level, the genetic and epigenetic causes of neurodegenerative diseases. Her goal is to develop targeted therapeutics for treating and curing these conditions.

Hsieh was recruited to UTSA, and her work was made possible through a $2.7 million gift from The Robert J. Kleberg, Jr. and Helen C. Kleberg Foundation and an endowment for the Semmes Foundation Distinguished Chair in Cell Biology.

That’s just the start of the story. Read how endowments are enabling researchers like Hsieh to lay the scientific groundwork for bigger grants and to bring together talent and expertise vital to important research.

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