Geyer Recognized by Society for the Study of Reproduction | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post, Jules Norwood, is a contributor to ECU News Services.

Dr. Christopher Geyer received this year’s New Investigator Award at the 50th annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Reproduction. (Photos by Cliff Hollis)
    East Carolina University's Dr. Christopher Geyer was named the recipient of the 2017 New Investigator Award by the Society for the Study of Reproduction (SSR) for his contributions to the field of reproductive sciences.

    The award recognizes outstanding research contributions by an SSR member within 12 years of the completion of their Ph.D.

    Geyer, an associate professor in the Brody School of Medicine Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, is working to explain the earliest stages of reproduction by investigating the mechanisms through which spermatogenic stem cells become differentiated and begin the process of becoming sperm cells.

    His lab was recently awarded a five-year, $1.45 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the response of stem cells to retinoic acid.

    "This is a highly competitive award, and the list of past winners is virtually a who's who of top scientists in the field," said Dr. Rebecca Krisher, chair of the SSR Awards Committee. "Dr. Geyer was chosen for this honor based upon the originality of his research, his scientific productivity and the significance of his contributions to the field of spermatogonial and testicular biology."

    Geyer said he has been a member of SSR since joining as a new graduate student in 2002. "Receiving the award was overwhelming," he said. "I've never had to get up and speak in front of so many people."

    The award was presented during the opening ceremony of SSR's 50th anniversary meeting in Washington, D.C. As the New Investigator Award recipient, Geyer gave a 30-minute presentation before more than 900 attendees of the conference.

    "This was one of the goals I set for myself when I first started here in 2010, because I have several friends who've won this award and I've always admired their work and wanted to follow in their footsteps, so to speak," Geyer said. "I have tried to emulate what they've done in their careers, but I never actually expected it to happen."

    Nick Serra and Ellen Velte, doctoral students in Geyer's lab, also attended the conference and presented their work in poster format.

    Geyer was nominated by his mentors, Dr. John McCarrey and Dr. Mitch Eddy, and more than a dozen professors from the United States and abroad wrote letters of support. He has been invited to speak at the annual meetings of SSR's sister societies - the Society for Reproduction and Fertility, which will meet in Liverpool, United Kingdom in January; and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, which will meet in San Antonio, Texas in November.
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