Core Facilities https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities Expertise. Innovation. Collaboration. Wed, 14 Jan 2026 23:28:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Spotlight on Core Talent: Nivedita Pareek https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/spotlight-on-core-talent-nivedita-pareek/ Tue, 20 Jan 2026 17:17:01 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6341 Read more]]> Elevating Research Excellence: Nivedita Pareek Honored with UNC Core Staff Recognition Award

Nivedita (Nivi) Pareek, the Microbiome Core Manager at the UNC School of Medicine, has been awarded the Performance Excellence award as part of the UNC Research Core Facilities Staff Recognition Program. Since joining the Microbiome Core in 2022 as a Research Associate, Pareek has demonstrated a rapid professional trajectory, evolving from a technically skilled bench scientist into a strategic leader who has materially improved the rigor and efficiency of research across the university.


A Journey of Growth and Innovation

Pareek has been a part of the UNC Chapel Hill community for six years, spending two years in Rita Tamayo’s lab before dedicated the last four years to the Microbiome Core. Coming from a science-oriented family, she pursued a double master’s degree in Biological Sciences and Microbiology to focus on medicine from a research perspective.

Her transition to Core Manager was fueled by a “self-driven” commitment to learning. Notable highlights of her technical achievements include:

  • Automation Mastery: Independently learning programming and robotics to operate the Opentrons automated liquid-handling platform.

  • Cost-Efficient Solutions: Developing miniaturized protocols for DNA library preparation, which significantly reduced costs and increased throughput while maintaining high data quality.

  • Pioneering Pipelines: Leading the implementation of a multi-core long-read sequencing pipeline in collaboration with the HTSF.

    Nivi’s early strengths in molecular techniques… have expanded into advanced project leadership, cross-core collaboration, and staff training,” notes Dr. Andrea Azcarate-Peril, Professor of Medicine and Core Director.


Commitment to Rigor and Mentorship

Beyond technical innovation, Pareek has taken full ownership of core operations, instituting rigorous maintenance schedules and overhauling Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to meet higher safety and reproducibility standards. Her efforts have led to a notable reduction in sample-failure rates and more stable sequencing metrics.

As an educator, Pareek is described as “natural and highly effective”. She mentors students and staff in complex techniques like DNA extraction and automation, focusing on the scientific reasoning behind the procedures rather than just execution. Her leadership has expanded the Core’s functional capacity, allowing junior personnel to reliably perform tasks that once required senior intervention.


Personal Reflections and Inspiration

For Pareek, the most rewarding part of working in a core facility is the diversity of expertise and the opportunity for continuous learning from colleagues at all levels. She finds inspiration in the resilience of women, particularly her supervisor, Dr. Azcarate-Peril, whose philosophy that “the show must go on” motivates her approach to leadership.

Nivedita’s impact is perhaps best summarized by the users she supports.

Quick Facts about Nivedita Pareek:

  • Favorite Project: Leading her first independent 16S rRNA sequencing project, which reinforced her adaptability under pressure.

  • Superpower: Excellence in organization and management when coordinating multiple high-volume tasks.

  • Outside the Lab: She enjoys traveling and spending quality time with friends and family.

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Structural Bioinformatics Core Director Highlighted in Carolina Scientific https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/structural-bioinformatics-core-director-highlighted-in-carolina-scientific/ Wed, 14 Jan 2026 23:28:45 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6352 Read more]]> Dr. Venkata Chirasani, Director of the R.L. Juliano Structural Bioinformatics Core, was recently highlighted in the Fall 2025 Volume 21 Issue 1 edition of Carolina Scientific. Founded in Spring 2008, Carolina Scientific serves to educate undergraduates by focusing on the exciting innovations in science and current research that are taking place at UNC-Chapel Hill. Carolina Scientific strives to provide a way for students to discover and express their knowledge of new scientific advances, to encourage students to explore and report on the latest scientific research at UNC-Chapel Hill, and to educate and inform readers while promoting interest in science and research.

 

Dr. Chirasani’s expertise and impact is highlighted in the article “The Science of Folding” (pg. 12-13) alongside research spanning many fields of study.

 

 

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Cannon, Pareek, Pulley Awarded December UNC Core Staff Recognition Awards https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/cannon-pareek-pulley-awarded-december-unc-core-staff-recognition-awards/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 19:46:39 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6329 Read more]]> Celebrating Excellence: Fall/Winter Core Staff Recognition Awards 

The School of Medicine (SOM) Office of Research Technologies is proud to announce the recipients of the Fall/Winter Core Staff Recognition Awards. These awards celebrate the outstanding staff within our UNC-Chapel Hill core facilities who exemplify the highest standards of Customer Service, Performance Excellence, and Technical Achievement. 

 

Customer Service Award: Gabrielle Cannon 

Genomic Services Manager, Advanced Analytics Core 

Gabrielle is celebrated for her technical brilliance and tireless dedication to the UNC research community. As a “quintessential team player,” she manages complex genomic workflows with such proficiency that investigators remark “data magically appears” once samples are in her care. 

  • Scientific Impact: Her deep expertise in single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) was vital to a high-impact 2025 Cell publication. 
  • Technological Innovation: Gabrielle pioneered fixed-cell sequencing technologies that have already saved labs significant time and cost. 
  • Essential Support: One faculty member noted that a major transcriptomic resource—already cited over 200 times—“wouldn’t have happened without Gabrielle”. 

Beyond her mastery of the bench, Gabrielle is recognized for her extreme flexibility, frequently working late into the night or through holidays to ensure the survival of precious, time-sensitive samples. Whether she is processing 1,000 samples or making complex science accessible to everyone from undergraduates to deans, her commitment elevates the entire core’s reputation for customer service. 

 

Performance Excellence Award: Nivedita (Nivi) Pareek 

Manager, UNC Microbiome Core 

Since joining the Microbiome Core in 2022, Nivi has demonstrated an extraordinary professional trajectory. She has evolved from a technically skilled bench scientist into a strategic leader whose work materially elevates the rigor and efficiency of research across campus. 

  • Innovation & Efficiency: Nivi independently mastered coding and robotics to implement automated liquid-handling protocols. By developing miniaturized DNA library preparation workflows, she dramatically increased throughput while creating a path for significant cost savings for investigators. 
  • Operational Excellence: She spearheaded a comprehensive overhaul of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs), ensuring consistency in reagent handling and biosafety that has directly reduced sample-failure rates. 
  • Mentorship & Collaboration: A natural educator, Nivi has mentored numerous students and staff, instilling rigorous scientific thinking in the next generation. 

 

Technical Achievement Award: DaVetta Pulley 

Gnotobiotic Research Support Technician, National Gnotobiotic Rodent Resource Center 

DaVetta is recognized for her remarkable technical proficiency and her role as an essential pillar of the Gnotobiotic Core. Over six years, she has earned a reputation for a “relentlessly positive attitude” and a mastery of the high-precision procedures required for germ-free research. 

  • Precision Under Pressure: DaVetta performs high-stakes procedures with “effortless” precision, such as completing nearly 600 injections in a single period despite the physical restrictions of isolator gloves. 
  • Funding Success: Her meticulous data collection directly supported a Principal Investigator’s R01 grant application, which achieved full funding on its first submission. 
  • Unwavering Dedication: She consistently goes above and beyond, providing the daily monitoring required for high-cost, complex experiments to proceed without interruption. 

DaVetta’s attentiveness to researchers’ needs and her growth into a mentorship role make her an invaluable asset to the SOM’s research mission. 

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Gregory and Clissold Publish in Journal of Biomolecular Techniques https://www.med.unc.edu/genetics/gregory-and-clissold-publish-in-journal-of-biomolecular-techniques/ Tue, 06 Jan 2026 19:16:10 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6326 Dr. Chris Gregory (Professor, Department of Genetics and Director, Office of Research Technologies) and Kara Clissold (Associate Director, Office of Research Technologies) published a paper titled “Incentivizing collaboration with core facilities: Developing an impactful core facility voucher program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine” (JBT 36(4):15-24, Dec 22, 2025).

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Congratulations to the Core Voucher Funding Recipients! https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/congratulations-to-the-core-voucher-funding-recipients/ Tue, 09 Dec 2025 04:10:39 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6291 Read more]]> In fiscal year 2026 (FY26), the Core Facility Advocacy Committee (CFAC) selected to fund 19 applications through the Core Voucher Program, a funding opportunity that provides up to $10,000 to applicants from the School of Medicine for expenditures within core facilities to generate pilot data for grants or engage in new method development. The goal of this program is to develop a long-term, stable, and resilient customer base for core facilities in the School of Medicine. This year, eligibility was limited to customers who are new to using the core facility, those who want to utilize a new core technology, those developing a multi-core pipeline, or those who have been affected by recent grant terminations and need to collect pilot data to pivot to new funding opportunities and collaborations. The funds are intended to be spent within the same fiscal year they were awarded. The applications underwent an NIH-style review and were scored for innovation, significance, and approach. Additional considerations were given to the appropriateness of the proposal for this funding mechanism, the likelihood of the proposed project’s completion within the timeframe, and the funding of projects across a range of core facilities and core technologies. Funding for this program was provided by the UNC SOM Dean’s Office and was partially supported through funds from the SOM Strategic Plan. Congratulations to all the funding recipients, and we thank the CFAC and the secondary reviewers for their efforts in evaluating the applications.

FY26 CFAC Voucher Program Projects
“Variant-specific roles of Elmo1 in oligodendrocytes and demyelinating diseases”
Dr. Yukako Kayashima, Research Assoc. Professor in the Department of Pathology and Lab Medicine

“Development of Noninvasive Diagnostics for Detecting Environmentally-Induced Airway Inflammation”
Dr. Brian Button, Professor in the joint Depts. of Biochem & Biophysics and Biomedical Engineering

“Genetic differences in brain activation in response to cocaine”
Dr. Lisa Tarantino, Professor in the Department of Genetics

“Defining a phosphoproteomics workflow in patient-derived cancer organoids”
Dr. Clint Stalnecker, Assistant Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics

“Novel Lipid Scaffolds for Structural Insight into Peripheral Membrane Proteins”
Dr. Saskia Neher, Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics

“Metabolic changes in microglia essential for their protection against Alzheimer’s disease”
Victor Madormo, MD/PhD Candidate in the Department of Pharmacology
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Gwenn Garden, Department of Neurology

“Integrated Proteomics to Uncover How β-GPA Supports Long-Term Brain Health in Aging”
Joseph Latham, Post-Baccalaureate scholar, UNC PRISM program
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Jonathan Schisler, Department of Pharmacology

“Establish a human liver organoid model with Kupffer cells”
Dr. Sarah Rowe-Conlon, Associate Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology

“Characterizing seizure-induced changes in gene expression and the extracellular matrix in Angelman Syndrome”
Dr. Robert Mealer, Assistant Professor in the joint Departments of Genetics and Psychiatry

“Reaching persons with HIV who are out of care through Expedited access to Long-Acting Injectable antiretroviral therapy -“RELAI””
Dr. Sarah Rutstein, Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine Division of Infectious Disease

“Human iPSC-derived hepatocyte (iHep) platform to model HAV infection and enable antiviral discovery”
Dr. Ichiro Misumi, Assistant Professor, Department of Genetics

“Using a novel scRNA-seq approach to dissect neuronal-immune cell interactions in a murine model of viral paralysis”
Garima Singh, PhD Candidate in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Faculty Advisor. Dr. Matthew Vogt, Departments of Pediatrics (Pediatric Infectious Diseases) and Microbiology

“Dissecting neuro-immune mechanisms of tau pathology in adult-like organoids”
Dr. Jeremy Burgess, Postdoctoral Scholar
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Doug Phanstiel, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology

“Identification of Myeloid Cells Driving Inflammasome-Mediated CNS Inflammation:
Dr. Beverly Koller, Professor, Department of Genetics

“Identifying Regulators of Lung Macrophage Development from Monocytes by CRISPR screening”
Dr. Robert Hagan, Assistant Professor of Medicine

“Leveraging light-sheet microscopy to advance the development of a gene therapy for IMPG2-associated retinal degeneration”
Katherine Descant, PhD Candidate in the Neuroscience Curriculum
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Ben Philpot, Department of Cell Biology

“Peering Inside a Cell Biofactory: 3D Imaging Reveals How Simple Sponges Supercharge Cell Therapies”
Dr. Yevgeny Brudno, Associate Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering

“Disruption and restoration of cortical perineuronal nets”
Dr. Donita Robinson, Professor, Department of Psychiatry

“Establishing a Lightsheet Fluorescence Microscopy Pipeline to study white matter astrocytes”
Katie Holmes, PhD Candidate, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Katie Baldwin, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology

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Dr. Rachel Lynch, Director of the Systems Genetics Core, Promoted to Associate Professor https://www.med.unc.edu/genetics/lynch-promoted-to-associate-professor/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 16:57:28 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6241 UNC Metabolomics and Proteomics Core Recognized as Thermo Fisher Center of Excellence https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/unc-metabolomics-and-proteomics-core-recognized-as-thermo-fisher-center-of-excellence/ Thu, 13 Nov 2025 17:22:40 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6234 Read more]]>

Dr. Laura Herring (R) and Dr. Whitney Stutts (L) display their “Thermo Fisher Center of Excellence” plaque

The Michael Hooker Metabolomics and Proteomics (MAP) Core was recognized as a Thermo Fisher Center of Excellence in Metabolomics and Proteomics in 2025. The core manages seven state-of-the-art mass spectrometry systems for both proteomic and metabolomic services and provides additional capabilities and expertise in sample preparation, data analysis, research design, and consultation.

The Center of Excellence designation was highlighted in a recent Thermo Fisher Mass Spectrometry Symposium, held in October 2025 at UNC Chapel Hill. This symposium highlighted research in the fields of metabolomics and proteomics, held a session for lightning talks on original research, and provided updates on the future of the MAP Core, including new instrument capabilities in the fields of clinical proteomics, targeted and untargeted metabolomics. The core is here as a service to the UNC Chapel Hill community to ensure access to expertise and highly rigorous methodology for MS-based proteomic and metabolomic studies.

Dr. Laura Herring stands with the Thermo Fisher Astrai Mass Spectrometer at UNC Chapel Hill

Dr. Laura Herring, Director of the MAP Core, is excited about the opportunity for increased impact in research innovation and education as a result of the Thermo Fisher partnership.

Interested in learning more? Visit the core’s website, join the UNC Mass Spectrometry mailing list to learn more about mass spectrometry-centered events happening here on campus, or contact the team to get started!

 

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ORT and UNC Core Directors Co-Authors on Recent Publications https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/ort-and-unc-core-directors-co-authors-on-recent-publications/ Wed, 05 Nov 2025 13:00:39 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6200 Read more]]> The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has a long-standing tradition of scholarship on core facility operations, best practices, and the import of cores for driving rigor and reproducibility. In September, several members of the ABRF Committee on Core Rigor and Reproducibility, including Dr. Patricia Basta, Director of the BioSpecimen Processing Facility, published a paper entitled “Optimizing Research Visibility: The Role of Investigators and Shared (Core) Research Resources in Publications Using RRIDs” in the Journal of Biomolecular Techniques. This article explores the factors that impact the acknowledgement of core facilities (or the lack thereof) in scholarly publications and discusses the value of permanent identifiers, like Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs) in addressing some of those factors.

 

In October, Dr. Michelle Itano, Director of the Neuroscience Microscopy Core, and Kara Clissold, Associate Director in the Office of Research Technologies, published “How do you measure the success and impact of a core facility?” in Biotechniques. This paper discusses various Return on Investment (ROI) measures used to assess core facilities as well as the challenges and caveats in applying those same assessment strategies across core facilities with different operational parameters and the critical importance of ensuring core directors and their stakeholders have the tools necessary to use data to assess their core facility operations.

 

Congrats to all the authors on their publications!

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Science in Service: How Dr. Nabarun Dasgupta’s Partnership with a UNC Core Facility is Saving Lives https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/science-in-service-how-dr-nabarun-dasguptas-partnership-with-a-unc-core-facility-is-saving-lives/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 13:00:38 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6224 Read more]]>

Dr. Nabarun Dasgupta, Innovation Fellow in the Gillings School of Global Public Health, Senior Scientist at the UNC Injury Prevention Research Center, nad 2025 MacArthur Fellow

Dr. Nabarun Dasgupta calls himself a pharmaco-epidemiologist. He’s also a harm reduction advocate, scientist, mentor, scientific advisor, community outreach specialist, and, most recently, MacArthur Fellow1. Dasgupta’s work centers around addressing the opioid epidemic at the community level. On one front, he is co-founder and Board Chair for the non-profit Remedy Alliance/For The People. This organization ensures that local harm reduction organizations have sustainable and equitable access to low-cost naloxone, which can be administered to directly counter the effects of an opiate overdose. They negotiate with pharmaceutical companies on behalf of nearly 500 community-based organizations, provide support to harm reduction programs around the country that want to establish or scale naloxone programs, and contribute to research to disseminate information worldwide (his paper describing the long-term impact of one community’s naloxone distribution and administration through an overdose prevention program2 was published just weeks after the MacArthur Foundation award was announced).

On another front is his own academic lab here at UNC Chapel Hill where he is a Gillings Innovation Fellow in the Gillings School of Global Public Health and a Senior Scientist at the UNC Injury Prevention Research Center. Here, Dasgupta’s group, the Opioid Research Lab (as part of a multi-institution collaboration), or the Street Drug Analysis Lab colloquially, provides high-quality analytical testing of street drug samples submitted by drug users through community organizations (a practice called drug checking). By their nature, street drugs are not regulated, meaning drug users don’t know what is in them. Drug checking detects and identifies all the substances found within the samples, including dangerous contaminants. The results provide information back to local community groups (including EMS and clinical/hospital staff, harm reduction groups, and state and local health departments) who can prepare for and communicate the side effects of those contaminants in local drug supplies back to users, ensuring appropriate response and preparation for overdose events. The lab also provides results back to the individuals who donated the samples–empowering users to make informed decisions about their health. Anonymized data is then made publicly available in formats accessible by both the public and other data scientists.

Dasgupta sat down with me recently to discuss the impact and importance of shared resources at academic institutions to improving equity and access to the kind of instrumentation he uses for this research—and how one core facility in particular is a linchpin to the success of his program.

 

The Research Question

First things first: Dasgupta is not an analytical chemist. “I failed organic chemistry in college!” he laughed. “But a community outreach group we work with in Greenville had just gotten an FTIR [spectrometer] and asked me to help them figure it out.” Fourier-Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectrometry shines infrared light through a drug sample and measures how the sample absorbs or transmits that light to identify the chemical composition of the substance. These instruments are relatively affordable, making this a cost-effective approach for local organizations and harm reduction groups to  allow local drug users to test their own supply to look for contamination, like fentanyl, ketamine, and, most recently, xylazine. But this technique has its limitations, particularly for samples of different consistencies or that have specific kinds of molecules in them. “The Greenville organization ran into a sample they weren’t getting good data for with the FTIR,” Dasgupta explains. He knew there was technology that would overcome the problem, but it required a much more expensive instrument and specialized technique called Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS). This process physically separates the compounds to identify them and can separate derivatives of chemical compounds as well as detect trace quantities—all areas where FTIR struggles. The instruments to perform this kind of analysis are not cost-effective or practical for small community groups to operate in the field but are common at academic institutions conducting basic scientific research. “I literally did a Google search for ‘UNC FTIR and GC-MS’ and the [University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill] Chemistry Department’s Mass Spec Core came up” Dasgupta says.

Dr. Brandie Ehrmann, Director of the UNC Department of Chemistry Mass Spectrometry Core Facility

Dr. Brandie Ehrmann, Director of the Chemistry Mass Spectrometry Core, remembers that e-mail. “He was like, ‘Hey, I’m interested in doing some mass spec on some illicit drugs’” she laughs. The core facility was successfully able to analyze the sample and provide the data back to the organization in Greenville, but the collaboration continued to grow. Since then, nearly 17,000 unique drug samples have been analyzed here at UNC as of October 2025 at a rate of nearly 400 a week. Dasgupta deliberately collects as little data as possible from the donors. He views his role as breaking down the barriers between the technology and the people who would benefit from the data output—namely, local organizations and the drug users themselves. This kind of drug checking program has been proven to cause users to change their substance use behavior when they know there is an increased risk of an overdose because of specific contamination3,4. And the organizations he partners with and the substance users themselves often drive all the research questions. “They ask more interesting, meaningful, and overall better questions.” He explains. “It’s their lived experience.”  His role in the research typically starts when drug users and community group members come back to him with questions about the results or to explain what they found. Data from the Street Drug Analysis lab has been used to verify the effectiveness of new brands of fentanyl test strips for the local street supply and identify why some street drug users in one community were reporting strong hallucinations as side effects (it turns out that the hallucinations were 12 times more likely to occur in users whose drug supply was contaminated with medetomidine5, a potent sedative and anesthetic that was only just beginning to make its way into the street drug supply).

 

The Core Collaboration

The role of the Chemistry Mass Spectrometry Core in Dasgupta’s research has evolved since that first e-mail. This core facility’s business model is to train users to independently operate the instrumentation. When he kept coming back with more samples from his partner organizations to validate FTIR and other drug checking mechanism findings and to interrogate samples better suited for the GC-MS technique, Dasgupta brought another research scientist in.  Erin Tracy, who had 10 years of analytical chemistry experience working in a forensic lab, works full-time in the core facility space running samples submitted to the Street Drug Analysis lab. She has desk space alongside other staff in the core facility. “It’s not even a collaboration,” Dasgupta muses. “It’s just one big team.” The relationship Dasgupta has developed with the core facility allows him and his lab the advantage of relying on the core’s expertise anytime there are new analytes in the results.  “We have collaborators at other institutions, and they sometimes run into roadblocks that we just bound over” he says. “The first time we saw peptides in the samples, or the first time we saw GLP-1s, we had no idea what we were looking at or how to make sense of it. We needed the expertise of [Ehrmann and the core staff].”

When Dasgupta first reached out to the Chemistry Mass Spectrometry Core, the instrument that was best suited for his analysis, affectionately known as “Mr. G,” was older and underutilized. “At a public institution doing public health research we have an obligation as [taxpayers] and to taxpayers to fully utilize the resources that our tax money is helping to fund,” Dasgupta says. But because the machine was older, it was expensive to maintain and broke down frequently. That left community members with long wait times to get results. The immediate impact of the instrumentation to the health of people here in North Carolina led the NC Collaboratory, which provides some funding for Dasgupta’s work, to fund the purchase of a new GC-MS in 2024. When it came time to decide where to put the instrumentation, Dasgupta knew he wanted it to stay in the core. He says his team benefits too much from the close collaboration to consider moving it elsewhere. Ehrmann agrees. “There are so many things in the infrastructure that are in place that would be so difficult to change at this moment in time. Namely, the DEA [Drug Enforcement Administration] lab, the fact that I hold the DEA license—all of these things really matter in the grand scheme of things. Their analytical team is officed in my lab. And when things break, I’m right here.”

While Ehrmann admits that the relationship her core has with Dasgupta’s lab has grown into something unique, how it started is a story as old as time for her core facility. “For us, oftentimes we don’t think about it as the problem that the [Principal Investigator] thinks about. We just think ‘Oh, it’s another kind of molecule,’” Ehrmann explains. “We can market ourselves as a resource for anyone who finds themself in a one-off need for a small molecule mass spec problem or someone who is like ‘Oh, this is a very interesting project!’ and the next thing you know they’ve been doing this kind of science for the next 8, 10 years.” Ehrmann attributes the ability to adapt to novel research questions and molecules as key for her core facility’s success. “I think my core in particular is one of the most diverse and unique on campus in that we’re housed in Chemistry and there’s a very specific need that Chemistry has. But as a mass spectrometry core, our applications can be so diverse and our tools, our equipment, can handle so many analytical challenges that we have over the decade I’ve been here built expertise in a very broad small molecule world.”

Today, Dasgupta’s operation runs smoothly within the Chemistry Mass Spectrometry Core. But he’s quick to point out that the success of his program is due to many units at UNC Chapel Hill and in North Carolina all pulling in the same direction. From University Counsel and the Office of Sponsored Programs, which helped him set up his testing program, to the relationship needed between the Department of Chemistry, Gillings School of Public Health, and Center for Injury Research and Prevention to make the collaboration work, and the NC Collaboratory and NC General Assembly for both funding his ongoing research and equipment and also subsidizing the cost to community organizations in North Carolina to access his analysis services for free. But he is already thinking forward and relies on Ehrmann’s expertise as a core director and mass spectrometrist to help turn his ideas into actionable research questions. “[Dasgupta] sometimes comes to me with technology questions like ‘Do you think this would be possible?’, or ‘If it’s possible, what kind of mass spec would I need?’” Ehrmann says. “So, it’s been a very productive and supportive and collaborative relationship that we have.”

 

Dasgupta highlights the impact to the local communities they serve as the most rewarding aspect of his work.  Many of the samples arrive with handwritten notes tucked inside, or notes written on the shipping containers thanking Dasgupta’s lab for their work. Collaborators started sending Erin little glass ducks as tokens of appreciation; they now line her workspace. Ehrmann remembers thinking, “I’m doing the right thing, right?” when Dasgupta initially reached out. Now she’s confident in that answer. “It’s just really cool what has grown from that one interaction and […] to hear the stories and think about [the impact].”

 

Read (or listen) more about Dasgupta’s work or follow him on Bluesky or X.

 

References

  1. Nabarun Dasgupta. MacArthur Foundation. Published October 8, 2025. Accessed October 29, 2025. https://guides.himmelfarb.gwu.edu/AMA/websites
  2. Dasgupta N, Bell A, Visnich M, Doe-Simkins M, Wheeler E, et al. Trends and characteristics during 17 years of naloxone distribution and administration through an overdose prevention program in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. PLOS ONE 2025;20(10): e0315026. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0315026
  3. Goldman JE, Waye KM, Periera KA, Krieger MS, Yedinak JL, Marshall BDL. Perspectives on rapid fentanyl test strips as a harm reduction practice among young adults who use drugs: a qualitative study. Harm Reduct J. 2019;16(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s12954-018-0276-0
  4. Peiper NC, Clarke SD, Vincent LB, Ciccarone D, Kral AH, Zibbell JE. Fentanyl test strips as an opioid overdose prevention strategy: Findings from a syringe services program in the Southeastern United States. Int J Drug Policy. 2019;63:122-128. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2018.08.007
  5. Sibley AL, Bedard ML, Tobias S, et al. Emergency of medetomidine in the unregulated drug supply and its association with hallucinogenic effects. Drug and Alc Rev. 2025. doi: 10.1111/dar.70024
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First Annual SOM Core and CFAC Report for FY25 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/first-annual-som-core-and-cfac-report-for-fy25/ Mon, 03 Nov 2025 16:25:03 +0000 https://www.med.unc.edu/corefacilities/?p=6214 Read more]]> The Office of Research Technologies is excited to release the first annual UNC Chapel Hill School of Medicine Core Facility and CFAC Report for FY25. The report highlights the impact of core facilities within the School of Medicine and the usage of core facilities by School of Medicine Principal Investigators, as well as outlines all of the ways in which the Office of Research Technologies and Core Facility Advocacy Committee are supporting research and core operations.

 

Check out the online version or download a PDF.

 

 

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