Society awards new Early Career Grants
            
            
            We have just awarded 9 Early Career Grants of up to £10,000 to help fund another round of cutting-edge research projects, as part of our aim to advance scientific research in endocrinology.
We wish all awardees good luck and look forward to learning about your future findings.
- Robert Allan (University of Central Lancashire) 
The influence of acute and chronic low temperature on local bone mineral density and systemic markers of bone health 
- Sinead McGlacken Byrne (UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health) 
Characterising the role of non-coding small RNA species in post-transcriptional gene expression regulation in the human fetal ovary at critical developmental stages 
- Steven Millership (Imperial College London)
Functional characterisation of a novel and epistable beta cell subpopulation with proliferative potential 
- Kleopatra Alexiadou (Imperial College London) 
The effect of GLP-1 on the immune system in obesity and type 2 diabetes: an anti-inflammatory action 
- Phyllis Phuah (Imperial College London) 
Investigating the role of the Coeliac-Superior Mesenteric ganglia in pancreatic hormone release and glucose homeostasis 
- Milan Muso (Institute of Metabolic Science, Cambridge) 
Testing deleterious SIRT6 variants for effect on glucose uptake and IGF1 levels in humans 
- Grace Salsbury (William Harvey Research Institute, London) 
Development and characterisation of novel CRISPR/Cas9 KO cell lines of FH and SDHAF2 as models of PPGL 
- Catriona Hilton (University of Oxford) 
The role of Erythroferrone in regulating human body fat distribution 
- David Clayton (Nottingham Trent University) 
A novel 4-day evening fasting intervention to support appetite, glycaemia and energy balance management, in lean adults. 
 
Early Career Members can apply in the next round of our Early Career Grant awards – deadline is Wednesday 10 November 2021.