ARVO Foundation Collaborative Research Fellowships

Supporting researchers from developing countries to strengthen ophthalmic research capacities

The ARVO Foundation for Eye Research established Collaborative Research Fellowships to promote international scientific interactions and innovative research. 

This fellowship pairs researchers from developing countries with established scientists to strengthen ophthalmic research capacities. It supports a one-year project, which can include additional training in specialty equipment or research methodologies. Three $10,000 fellowships are available per year.

The award has supported 33 researchers from 14 developing countries since it began in 2009, including Argentina, Brazil, Bulgaria, China, Georgia, Ghana, Hungary, India, Iraq, Mexico, Nepal, Romania, Rwanda and Turkey.

Applications open Aug. 1  Oct. 1

View eligibility details and how to apply


2022 Collaborative Research Fellowship recipients

 

José Arthur Milhomens Filho, MDJose Arthur Milhomens Filho, MD
Escola Paulista de Medicina (EPM) - Universidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP), Brazil

Collaborator
Olivia L. Lee, MD (University of California Irvine)

Project title: Predictors of Keratoconus Progression: A Translational Study using Ocular Imaging and Tissue Biomarkers

 

Maria Constanza Paz, PhD

Maria Constanza Paz, PhD
Centro de Investigación en Bioquímica Clínica (CIBICI)- Consejo Nacional de Investigación en Ciencia y Tecnología (CONICET). Facultad de Ciencias Químicas (FCQ), Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (UNC), Argentina

Collaborator
Steven J. Fliesler, Phd, FARVO (SUNY- University at Buffalo)

Project title: Evaluation of neurotoxic effect of alpha2-Macroglobulin  in mouse retina: participation of autophagic flux

 

Raba Thapa, PhD

Raba Thapa, PhD
Tilganga Institute of Ophthalmology, India

Collaborator
Geoff C. Tabin, MD (Byers Eye Institute at Stanford University)

Project title: Population prevalence, pattern and associated factors for retinal diseases at high altitude of Nepal


2021 Collaborative Research Fellowship recipients

 

Ali Al-Timemy, PhDAli Al-Timemy, PhD
University of Baghdad, Iraq

Collaborator
Siamak Yousefi, PhD (University of Tennessee Health Science Center)

Project title: Developing a device-agnostic artificial intelligence model to detect subclinical and early-stage keratoconus

 

Shikha Gupta, MD

Shikha Gupta, MD
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, India

Collaborator
Alex Huang, MD, PhD (University of California, Los Angeles and Doheny Eye Institute)

Project title: Fluorescent Aqueous Angiography in Congenital, Developmental and Adult-onset Glaucomas

 

Diana Perez-Ibave, PhD

Diana Pérez-Ibave, PhD
Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León, School of Medicine and University Hospital, Monterrey Nuevo León, Mexico

Collaborator
Genaro Ramírez, MD, PhD (University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)

Project title: Abnormal Crosstalk between O-GlcNAcylation and Phosphorylation in Kinase Regulation as a Mechanism of Glucose Toxicity in Diabetic Retinopathy


2020 Collaborative Research Fellowship recipients

 

Portait of Pablo Barcelona looking at the camera in his lab

Pablo Barcelona, PhD
Center for Research in Clinical Biochemistry and Immunology, National University of Cordoba, Argentina

Collaborator
Mike Saphieha, PhD (Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital Research Centre)

Project title: p75NTR as a potential therapeutic target of proliferative choroidal neovascularization

 

Portait of Wanjiku Mathenge, PhD

Wanjiku Mathenge, PhD
Rwanda International Institute of Ophthalmology, Rwanda

Collaborator
Nathan Congdon, MD, PhD (Queen's University Belfast)

Project title: Diabetic retinopathy screening using retinal imaging and automated grading with artificial intelligence in Rwanda: A randomized control trial

 

Portrait of Sudhir Ranganath

Sudhir Ranganath, PhD
Siddaganga Institute of Technology, India

Collaborator
Sangly P. Srinivas, PhD (Indiana University)

Project title: Rescuing the hypothermia- and cytokine-induced damage to donor corneal endothelial functions by pre-treatment with microtubule stabilizers


2019 Collaborative Research Fellowship recipients

 

Photo of Vicente Bermudez

Vicente Bermúdez, PhD
Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas Bahía Blanca, Argentina

Collaborator
Nicolas G. Bazan, MD, PhD, FARVO (LSU Health School of Medicine)

Project title: The Phospholipase D (PLD) pathway modulates retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells phagocytosis: an insight into signaling at the onset of retinal inflammatory diseases

About Dr. Bermúdez's project
This project is focused on the role that certain lipid signaling enzymes play in the inflammatory response of retinal cells. Since inflammation and oxidative stress are common factors involved in the pathogenesis of several ocular diseases that eventually end in vision loss and blindness, elucidating the molecular mechanisms involved could provide new insights for the treatment of ocular inflammatory diseases. The specific aim of this project is to study the physiological role of the phospholipase D (PLD) pathway, a specific lipid signaling pathway, in retinal cells of great importance, such as retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, exposed to pro-inflammatory injury and oxidative stress. We expect that this project will contribute to understand the molecular basis of inflammatory retinal degenerative diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathy (DR) and uveitis, and open new possible avenues of potential therapeutic exploration.

 

Picture of Daniela QuinterosDaniela Alejandra Quinteros, PhD
Unidad de Investigación y Desarrollo en Tecnología Farmacéutica (UNITEFA)- CONICET
Argentina

Collaborator
Rocío Herrero Vanrell, PhD
Universidad Complutense de Madrid

Project title: Potential neuroprotective effect of antioxidants included in innovative pharmaceutical formulations

About Dr. Quinteros' project
Neurodegenerative eye diseases such as glaucoma, retinitis pigmentosa, diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration are characterized by being rough and are responsible for the majority of visual dysfunctions and blindness of the world population, they trigger mechanisms of retinal degeneration with death of recipient cells and / or ganglionic whose consequence entails a progressive loss of visual functions. One of the therapeutic strategies aimed at the treatment of these pathologies is neuroprotection. This project proposes the use of synthetic (Melatonin) and natural (Carvacrol and Tymol) neuroprotective oxidizing agents that can prevent, limit, and in some cases reverse, degeneration or death of retinal neuronal cells. Currently, pharmacotherapy seen from this point of view is nonexistent, therefore, if we can generate, through innovative pharmaceutical systems, a potential pharmacotherapy that can vehicularize antioxidant drugs and exert an neuroprotective effect through an eye-level instillation would generate a high impact in the therapeutic.

 

Picture of Swaminathan Sethu

Swaminathan Sethu, BDS, MSc, PhD
Narayana Nethralaya Foundation, India

Collaborator
Debasish Sinha, PhD (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

Project title: Intraocular immune cell profiling in dry age-related macular degeneration

About Dr. Sethu's project
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a vision-threatening condition affecting millions of people worldwide. Of the two varieties of AMD, the wet AMD form currently has some treatment options while the dry AMD form does not have any therapies. There is an immediate need to facilitate the development of targeted therapy for the management of dry AMD. In addition to abnormal inflammation, emerging evidence points to the role of immune cells in retinal degeneration in animal models. This research project is directed at determining the intraocular immune cell subsets and their functional status in dry AMD patients. The findings will be cross-validated in a murine model that mimics pathologic features of dry AMD. The findings from the proposed study will add critical information to the dry AMD knowledgebase and possibly initiate therapeutic strategies, such as harnessing or dampening the local (ocular) immune system in the management of dry AMD.


2018 Collaborative Research Fellowship recipients
 

Srilekha Sundaramurthy

Srilekha Sundaramurthy, PhD
Medical Research Foundation, Sankara Nethralaya, India

Collaborator
Patrick Yu-Wai-Man, BMedSci (Hons), MBBS (Hons), PhD, FRCPath, FRCOphth
University of Cambridge and Moorfields Eye Hospital

Project title: Mitochondrial genome landscape analysis in an Indian cohort of Lebers Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) patients negative to primary mutation (G3460A, G11778A, T14484C)

About Dr. Sundaramurthy's project
Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial genetic disease that is characterized by bilateral, painless, subacute visual failure that develops in the young adult life. Ninety five percent of individuals with LHON harbor any one of the three point mutations in mtDNA according to western literature. From our Indian cohort about sixty-nine percent of suspected LHON cases were negative for the primary mutation. Hence subjecting the primary mutation negative sample to whole mitochondrial sequencing would help us to identify possible causative pathogenic variation in these individuals which might be present in other genes apart from ND1, ND4 and ND6. This study would help us to have a comprehensive mutational landscape analysis in LHON cases and also to know the common polymorphisms which might occur in the controls. This would be the first study to involve the primary mutation negative samples for mitochondrial genome sequencing and to explore the relative frequency of mitochondrial mutations from Indian cohort.

 

Jeremias Galletti

Jeremias Galletti, PhD
Institute of Experimental Medicine, National Academy of Medicine/CONICET, Argentina

Collaborator
Cintia de Paiva, MD, PhD (Baylor College of Medicine)

Project title: Characterization of regulatory T cell populations involved in ocular surface immune tolerance

About Dr. Galletti's project
The aim is this project is to identify and characterize the immune cells that are responsible for keeping the ocular surface without inflammation. The eyes are continuously exposed to diverse threats from the environment, yet they become inflamed on seldom occasions. A better understanding of which cells control ocular surface inflammation and how they work could lead to new and better therapies for inflammatory eye disorders, such as dry eye and ocular allergy.

 

Samuel Kyei, PhD

Samuel Kyei, PhD
University of Cape Coast, Ghana

Collaborator
Lyne Racette, PhD (University of Alabama at Birmingham)

Project title: Assessing adherence to glaucoma treatment in Ghana

About Dr. Kyei's project
This project will focus on identifying the rate of adherence in Ghana and on determining the factors associated with adherence in this country. This is innovative because adherence has not yet been measured objectively in Africa. The prevalence of glaucoma in Ghana is high and improving adherence to therapy has the potential to lead to improved treatment outcomes and to the preservation of sight in a high-risk population.