# Integrated Health Sciences Facility Core

> **NIH NIH P30** · ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI · 2022 · $318,660

## Abstract

Project Summary
Mount Sinai's Transdisciplinary Center on Early Environmental Exposures was established in 2014 with the
mission to promote transdisciplinary environmental health research across the life course. The Integrated
Health Sciences Facility Core fulfills several critical components of our this mission by providing access to
measures of environmental exposure, molecular biomarkers of effect and even human study populations that
can be leveraged by Center Members in their Environmental health research. The IHSFC will continue to foster
studies of environmental health sciences that embrace emerging concepts and technologies, such as mixtures,
the “exposome” and satellite-based remote sensing of air pollution (a new service this grant cycle). The IHSFC
encourages research that moves beyond reductionist studies assessing chemical toxicity in isolation to
consider the totality of the environment, the context of exposure (nutrition/social environment or sex) and the
complex interactions among these factors that ultimately predict our health. In keeping with the Center's
mission to study transdisciplinary environmental health, the IHSFC serves as a gateway to a variety of
expertise and resources under a single administrative umbrella. This structure provides an intellectual milieu
that promotes collaboration, as the IHSFC is the transdisciplinary “heart” of the Center and functions as a
central hub through which Center Members have access to multiple venues of service, from consultation on
toxicologic properties of chemicals, to consultation on collection and measurement of standard and novel
exposure biomarkers, to measurement of molecular biomarkers of effect, and to accessing existing cohorts
and clinical populations. Our mission is to help investigators establish teams of collaborators who, together, will
extend the boundaries of environmental health sciences. To achieve this, the IHSFC also develops cutting
edge environmental measurements and biological response assays for Center Members, such as our highly
successful tooth based biomarker of metal exposure that reconstructs past exposure dose and exposure
timing. This biomarker played a key role in our recent NIH grant success being featured in 2 successful R01s,
a K award and 2 ECHO cohort grants. In the coming grant cycle, we will continue to develop additional
innovative methods to comprehensively measure exposure to environment insults, facilitate access to research
populations and biospecimen archives, and guide researchers to existing core services across Mount Sinai.
The IHSFC does not replicate services provided by other Mount Sinai core labs. Rather, we leverage and
supplement other cores, such as our Clinical Translational Science Award (CTSA) funded cores, and facilitate
access to CTSA core lab assays. Overall, the IHSFC of the Mount P30 Core Center at Mount Sinai is a critical
resource that allows researchers to build highly efficient and collaborative teams that can address ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10388185
- **Project number:** 5P30ES023515-09
- **Recipient organization:** ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI
- **Principal Investigator:** Manish Arora
- **Activity code:** P30 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2022
- **Award amount:** $318,660
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2014-06-18 → 2023-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10388185

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10388185, Integrated Health Sciences Facility Core (5P30ES023515-09). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-26 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10388185. Licensed CC0.

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