Li, a UAMS cancer research professor, named an Arkansas Research Alliance Scholar

by Talk Business & Politics staff ([email protected]) 280 views 

Dr. Hong-yu Li, a professor in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Pharmacy’s Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, has been named an Arkansas Research Alliance (ARA) Scholar.

Li also was named to the Helen Adams & Arkansas Research Alliance Endowed Chair. Using a bequest from Helen Adams, UAMS has provided $500,000 to fund the chair. The ARA, with the approval of its Board of Trustees, also has given $500,000 to its funding.

An endowed chair is the highest academic honor a university can bestow on its faculty. A chair can honor the memory of a loved one or may honor a person’s accomplishments and is supported with donations of $1 million or more, with the chair holder using the interest proceeds for research, teaching or service activities.

Helen Adams was a 1929 graduate of the University of Arkansas and co-owner with her husband, Roy Adams, of a Fayetteville flower shop. On her death in 2004, Helen Adams left a generous bequest to UAMS to support medical research.

Li is an internationally recognized scientist in the field of cancer treatment research. In his research, he designs and synthesizes small molecules through a variety of novel approaches to develop new agents for cancer treatments.

“Dr. Li’s recruitment, and the ARA Scholars program that was key to it, is an example of using state resources to attract or retain highly talented people who are on the cutting edge in their fields of scientific research,” Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said in a statement. “It pays dividends in the commercialization of research ideas and in job creation in our state.”

The ARA Scholars Program recruits highly respected thought leaders with the goal of adding value to existing research programs through collaboration, innovation and eventually commercialization that brings jobs and businesses to Arkansas.

“Having Dr. Li come to UAMS and Arkansas as an ARA Scholar is immensely positive,” said UAMS Chancellor Dr. Dan Rahn. “Already, he is proving to be an extraordinary asset to our state. We are proud to have him on our faculty along with our other three ARA Scholars at UAMS.”

As an ARA Scholar, Li joins Dr. Peter Crooks, chairman of the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the UAMS College of Pharmacy; Dr. Daohong Zhou, a professor in the Division of Radiation Health of the UAMS College of Pharmacy’s Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, and Dr. Gareth Morgan, director of the UAMS Myeloma Institute.

In April, Li started work as a professor at UAMS. He was recruited from the University of Arizona College of Pharmacy in Tucson. Before Arizona, Li worked about 10 years at Eli Lilly & Company’s Lilly Research Laboratory in Indianapolis, the last five years there as a principal research scientist.

He received his doctorate in marine natural product chemistry in 1995 from the University of Tokyo in Japan and was an assistant professor in Tohoku University in Japan. After coming to the United States, Li was first a postdoctoral associate in Department of Chemistry at Columbia University in New York City and then the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.