Huck seed grant program introduces new research themes for the life sciences

The Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences has launched its 2025-2026 new seed grant program. Huck seed grants foster innovative, interdisciplinary, and collaborative life sciences research.

Penn State Shield logo

While other topics in life sciences will also be considered, this year’s call-for-proposals is organized around seven new thematic priorities listed below, that will receive preferential consideration by the review panel.

“Researchers across the Huck Institutes are tackling fundamental questions in the life sciences and solving global challenges,” said Huck Institutes Director Christina Grozinger. “Our research themes are designed to help our scientists break down disciplinary silos, leverage new technologies, and explore ‘moonshot’ ideas that have the potential to transform how we do science and how we live.”

Single investigator grants will be funded at a maximum of $30,000. Multi-investigator proposals across multiple departments and/or colleges will be eligible to receive supplemental funding for up to $80,000.

Proposal submission details are available here. Submissions will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. EST on July 15, 2025.

Interdisciplinary Research Themes. Brief descriptions of the research themes are listed below. Full descriptions of these themes are available here.

Future Foods
Ensuring access to nutritious food in a changing world requires an integrated approach across genetics, microbiology, animal and plant biology, agroecology, and human nutrition. Huck researchers are pioneering strategies to support the production of healthy and diverse foods, including leveraging emerging technologies and controlled environment agriculture, and studying how diet influences human health from metabolomics to movement. We aim to empower farmers with better tools and families with science-based information that support health across the lifespan.

Health for Life
The health of plants, animals, and humans is shaped by exposures throughout life—from microbes and contaminants to diet and social conditions. These exposures can have lasting effects on immunity, cognition, and metabolism, even across generations. Our researchers are developing holistic strategies that improve life-long health by working with stakeholders across the biological, environmental, and socio-cultural spectrum.

Emergent Intelligence in Organisms
Organisms—from microbes to humans—show remarkable abilities to sense, remember, and adapt. Intelligence emerges through networks of genes, cells, and neural systems, even in organisms without brains. Huck investigators are exploring how organisms integrate signals and past experiences to make decisions, aiming to understand cognition, promote brain health, and inspire bio-informed computing and AI design.

Engineering Resilient Ecosystems
Healthy ecosystems rely on complex interactions among organisms and their environment. Stressors like pollution, disease, and invasive species can disrupt these systems. Our researchers are using a wide range of tools, from genomics to civil engineering, to protect and restore ecosystems—on farms, in forests, and in cities—through partnerships with conservationists, agencies, and communities.

Cross-Cutting Research Themes

Translational Science & Public Impact
Huck scientists are transforming biological insights into real-world tools and strategies. Our scientists accelerate vaccine and drug development, drive innovations in sustainable biotechnologies, and improve disease forecasting with integrated data. Our work promotes science-informed public policy and delivers practical solutions—from improving crop resilience to preventing ecosystem collapse—benefiting people and the planet.

Life at All Scales
We explore biology from molecules to ecosystems—how proteins and RNA control gene expression, how viruses enter cells, and how species are distributed across landscapes. Our teams develop AI-driven sensors to detect physiological changes and environmental shifts. These tools enhance our ability to monitor health and biodiversity, revealing vital connections across living systems.

AI to Action
Today’s data-rich world enables unprecedented insights across the life sciences. Huck researchers integrate large-scale data—from genomics to wearable tech—to uncover mechanisms behind biological and societal challenges. Our researchers are turning complex data into actionable strategies to address fundamental processes and global issues, from cell biology to public health.