Population Health and Environment

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Environment, Population, and Health Dynamics

 

Amy Boddy

Amy Boddy
category
research associates
Anthropology
University of California, Santa Barbara
Assistant Professor

Amy M. Boddy is a human biologist and evolutionary theorist in the Department of Anthropology. Her work uses applications from evolution and ecology to understand human health and disease. She uses a combination of genomics, computational biology and evolutionary theory to understand life history trade-offs between survival and reproduction across different levels of biological organization. One component of her research program examines how environmental cues, such as high extrinsic mortality, may guide resource allocations to cancer defenses and reproduction. Current cancer research topics include comparative oncology, intragenomic conflict, cellular life history trade-offs, and early life adversity and cancer outcomes later in life. In addition to her cancer research, she studies maternal/fetal conflict theory and the consequences of fetal microchimeric cells in maternal health and disease. 

Grant, Awards and Distinctions:

NIH U54: ACE Pilot Funding. Prevalence of reproductive cancers in nonhuman primates. Boddy is Co-PI. $7,350 total direct. 2021-2022.

NIH U54: ACE Pilot Funding. Molecular evolution of immunity, reproduction and cancer genes in crocodilians. Boddy is Co-PI. $13,500 total direct. 2021-2022.

NIH U54: ACE Pilot Funding. Oncogenic mutational signatures in cancer-like phenotypes in Acropora. Boddy is Co-I. $14,680 total direct. 2021-2022

NIH U54: ACE Pilot Funding. Of pan-species histology and macroecology: chasing a solution to Peto’s paradox across mammals. Boddy is Co-I. $12,000 total direct. 2021-2022.

John Templeton Foundation: We All Are Multitudes: the Microchimerism, Human Health and Evolution Project. $4,643,000 total direct. Boddy is Co-PI. 2021-2023

National Cancer Institute. $7,500,000 total direct. Co-Leader Project 1.2018-2023.

National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute (U54). Arizona Cancer Evolution Center. Applying models of evolution to cancer across scales, from species down to cells. $7,500,000 total direct. Boddy is Co-Leader Project 1. $263,024 total directs to UCSB. 2018-2023.

University of California Santa Barbara, Academic Senate Grant. The functional role of fetal microchimerism in maternal health. $11,513, PI.

National Science Foundation. Pregnancy-induced inflammation and obstacles to breastfeeding success in an industrialized environment. $30,934, Co-PI with student Carmen Hové. 2019-2021.

Administrative Supplement. Characterization of Elephant Tumor Evolution. $38,180 total direct. Co-PI. 2019-2020.

ACE Pilot Funding. Phenotypic and Genomic Responses to DNA Damage in Crocodilians. Co-PI. $8,000. 2019-2020.

ACE Pilot Funding. Somatic Mutations in Tumors from Wild African Elephants. Co-PI. $25,155 2019-2020.

 

Water, dams, and prawns: novel ecological solutions for the control and elimination of schistosomiasis.

author

Sokolow, S.H., I.J. Jones, M. Jocque, D. La,, O. Cords, A. Knight, A. Lund, C.L. Wood, K.D. Lafferty, C.M. Hoover, and P.A. Collender, J. Remais, D. López-Carr, J. Fisk, M. Kuris, G. De Leo. 2017.

year
broom author

Nearly 400 million people are at higher risk of schistosomiasis because dams block the migration of snail-eating river prawns.

author

Sokolow, Susanne H., Isabel J. Jones, Merlijn Jocque, Diana La, Olivia Cords, Anika Knight, Jonathan Fisk, Andrea Lund, Chelsea L. Wood, Kevin D. Lafferty, Armand M. Kuris, Justin Remais, Chris Hoover, Phillip A. Collender, David Lopez-Carr, and Giulio A. De Leo. 2017.

year
broom author
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