Dollars for Profs

Dig Into University Researchers' Outside Income and Conflicts of Interest

Published Dec. 6, 2019

This database was last updated in December 2019 and should only be used as a historical snapshot. There may be new or amended records not reflected here.

Financial doc
Filing Type

Conflict of Interest

Institutions must file significant disclosures to the National Institutes of Health if they determine financial relationships could affect the design, conduct or reporting of the NIH-funded research. The NIH provided us with their entire financial conflict of interest database, with filings from 2012 through 2019.

Should you be removed from our database? Contact us at [email protected]. Read more below.

John L. Hartman

University of Alabama at Birmingham, Department: Genetics

Should you be removed from our database? Contact us at [email protected]. Read more below.

Disclosed Conflict of Interest with

Spectrum PhenomX

Disclosed Value
Listed Reason
Equity Interest - Non-publicly traded entity ( e.g., stock, stock option, or other ownership interest)

The investigator's IP is related to that which is used in the project and thus its value could be impacted by the results.

The outcome of the research is of significant business interest to the entity and therefore the financial interest could like change based on the research results.

Listed Research Project
Constructing gene-regulatory networks to reveal the metabolic basis of lifespan i

The budding yeast S. cerevisiae has been instrumental in the study of cellular aging, with multiple, genome-wide, longevity screens reported over the past 5 years. Despite advances in identifying individual genes associated with lifespan changes, a consensus of understanding the underlying causes and regulation aging in cells has been limited. Using the combination of a novel, quantitative, high-throughput, automated yeast lifespan assay; robust metabolite and gene expression profiling; and cutting-edge, high-dimensional data analysis, we will investigate from a genome-wide perspective a new metabolic hypothesis for lifespan determination, using the power of yeast genetics to construct a Systems-Level Aging Network, which we anticipate has the potential to be in the future informative for aging of nearly all cell types.

Filed on September 18, 2012.

Tell us what you know about John L. Hartman's disclosure

We're still reporting about conflicts of interest. Is there something you'd like to tell us about this disclosure?

Name Institution Type Company Disclosed Value
John L. Hartman University of Alabama at Birmingham Conflict of Interest Spectrum PhenomX Value cannot be readily determined
If you see an error in the database or a reason we should not disclose a record, please contact us at [email protected] and we'll evaluate it on a case-by-case basis.
Sources: National Institutes of Health, public records requests filed at multiple public state universities

Notes: When a more specific filing date is not available for an individual financial disclosure or conflict of interest form, we use the year the form was filed. If the year was not disclosed, we report the range of years covered by our public records requests. In a few cases, a start date was provided instead of a filing date. In those cases, we use the start date instead.

Fewer than 10% of records from the University of Florida and fewer than 1% of records from the University of Texas system were removed because they did not contain enough information.

ProPublica obtained additional financial disclosures and conflict of interest forms that we have not yet digitized and added to the database. You can download those disclosures in the ProPublica Data Store.

Close Comment Creative Commons Donate Email Facebook Mobile Phone Podcast Print RSS Search Search Twitter WhatsApp
Current site Current page