No. 24-539 · U.S. National Science Foundation
Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences Core Programs
At a glance
AI summaryThis solicitation funds research in molecular and cellular biosciences, including molecular biophysics, genetic mechanisms, cellular dynamics and function, and systems and synthetic biology. It also includes special tracks for EPSCoR capacity-building collaborations and for integrative biology projects that cross BIO sub-disciplines, plus other options such as international, transitions, CAREER, RCN, RUI, RAPID, EAGER, RAISE, GOALI, planning, and conference or travel proposals. Eligible applicants are U.S. two- and four-year colleges and universities acting for faculty, and certain U.S.-based nonprofit non-academic organizations; there are no limits on who may serve as PI or on proposal counts per organization or PI. Pending funds, about $110 million will be committed for new awards in each cycle, with project budgets and durations varying and typically lasting 3 to 5 years. For the EXPAND MCB in EPSCoR track, the lead must be an EPSCoR-jurisdiction organization, the lead budget must exceed any non-lead collaborator budget, and the project must include a capacity-building plan.
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What it funds
Official description from grants.gov
MCB supports research that promises to uncover the fundamental properties of living systems across atomic, molecular, subcellular, and cellular scales. The program gives high priority to projects that advance mechanistic understanding of the structure, function, and evolution of molecular, subcellular, and cellular systems, especially research that aims at quantitative and predictive knowledge of complex behavior and emergent properties. MCB encourages research exploring new concepts in molecular and cellular biology, while incorporating insights and approaches from other scientific disciplines, such as chemistry, computer science, engineering, mathematics, and physics, to illuminate principles that govern life at the molecular and cellular level. MCB also encourages research that exploits experimental and theoretical approaches and utilizes a diverse spectrum of model and non-model animals, plants, and microbes across the tree of life. Proposals that pursue potentially transformative ideas are welcome, even if these entail higher risk. This solicitation calls for proposals in research areas supported by the four MCB core clusters, including: (i) structure, dynamics, and function of biomolecules and supramolecular assemblies, especially under physiological conditions ( Molecular Biophysics ); (ii) organization, processing, expression, regulation, and evolution of genetic and epigenetic information ( Genetic Mechanisms ); (iii) cellular structure, properties, and function across broad spatiotemporal scales ( Cellular Dynamics and Function ); and (iv) systems and/or synthetic biology to study complex interactions through modeling or manipulation or design of living systems at the molecular-to-cellular scale ( Systems and Synthetic Biology ). All MCB clusters prioritize projects that integrate across scales, investigate molecular and cellular evolution, synergize experimental research with computational or mathematical modeling, and/or develop innovative, broadly applicable methods and technologies. Projects that bridge the intellectual edges between MCB clusters are welcome. Projects that integrate molecular and cellular biosciences with other subdisciplines of biology are also welcome through the new Integrative Research in Biology (IntBIO) track. Regarding health-related challenges, NSF supports basic research in all areas of the biological sciences and recognizes that this foundational research is likely to impact many different areas, including human health. MCB celebrates all the biological science discoveries funded through MCB awards that have had major impacts on health, environment, energy, food production, and other applications. Nevertheless, research focused exclusively on understanding human diseases and their treatment is normally outside of the scope offunding and will be returned without review unless that research significantly advances other fields such as engineering, computer science, or the mathematical and physical sciences.
Who can apply
- Others