Graphic for the SPARK annual report

Overview

Innovation doesn’t come cheap. But without proof-of-concept to convince highly competitive granting agencies to fund a daring project, many bold ideas are never put into action. This is a particular challenge for younger scientists, who are still establishing their career. La Jolla Institute’s Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Awards program is designed to overcome these hurdles.

The Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Awards for Innovations in Immunology provides $25,000 in flexible start-up funding that enables LJI’s early career investigators to act on their promising projects for bold new approaches to diagnoses, treatments, and possibly even cures for diseases that afflict us today. It fills the gap between scientists’ imagination and that first solid set of data that allows them to attract additional funding to further their research and ultimately make life-saving discoveries.

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We invite you to imagine what life-saving discoveries your gift will SPARK.

Each year, LJI receives dozens of proposals from its graduate student and post-doctoral scientists. A panel that includes Institute scientists, leadership and the Tullie and Rickey families, reviews the proposals, selects the finalists, and has each of them present their projects in person. The finalists are then ranked in order to receive funding based on the total amount raised for the program that year from donor contributions. Each Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Award provides $25,000 in funding that must be spent within a year.

In addition to funding high-risk, high-reward research, the Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Awards program also provides training in how to communicate the importance of research to the public and attract private funding. Award winners ultimately gain the experience in running an independent research project, which can be an important career milestone.

By making a gift to support the Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Awards program, you have the potential to help bring groundbreaking discoveries to light by providing critical seed-funding to get them started.

2025 SPARK Winners

Nirmalya Dasgupta, Ph.D.
“My SPARK project aims to uncover how DNA modifications drive immune system decline with age. I will use cutting-edge technology to analyze T cell alterations across diverse age groups, ultimately revealing strategies to enhance immune function and prevent age-related diseases.”
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Laura Hinojosa
“SPARK support would allow me to address an important gap in reproductive health research. A better understanding of how hormonal contraceptives modulate the immune system is crucial for advancing women’s health.”
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Hsueh-Han “Dupon” Lu
“I hope to create vaccines that provide longer-lasting immunity with just one shot, potentially transforming vaccine use and improving public health worldwide.”
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Amparo Martínez Pérez, Ph.D.
“The time has come for medicine to consider conditions that affect women and were previously overlooked. This SPARK project could establish a revolutionary new perspective on the role of the adaptive immune response in gynecological disorders.”
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Gele Niemeyer
“As mumps makes a global resurgence, my SPARK project aims to design a safer and more effective protein-based vaccine to address the limitations of the current MMR vaccine.”
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Kelly Shaffer
“My SPARK project will investigate the blood of individuals who have likely survived multiple exposures to Ebola and Marburg viruses throughout their lifetimes, as their blood may contain crucial insights for developing broad-spectrum viral treatments and enhance our understanding of these unpredictable outbreaks.”
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2024 SPARK Winners

Jingru Fang, Ph.D.
“Winning the SPARK award means that I can ask a scientific question that excites me and matters to others, and I will have the opportunity to make some contribution to human health.”
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Isaac López-Moyado, Ph.D.
“For me, winning the SPARK award would be a seal of approval, that my ideas are worth to be funded, and it would also provide a confidence boost that would encourage me to keep working on and pursuing additional funding for this project.”
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Kazumasa Suzuki, M.D., Ph.D.
“Winning a SPARK award would be a very strong motivator for me, along with the financial support. It would mean that people understand and appreciate my research on autoimmune diseases. It would give me great confidence to push my research forward and seek further funding.”
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Chen Sun, Ph.D.
“Winning a SPARK award would affirm my dedication to structural biology and ignite my passion for advancing our understanding of cancer.”
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Rimjhim Agarwal
“Winning the SPARK award would mean a lot because it will allow me to apply my research skills to make a broader impact in the real world and simultaneously contribute to the current scientific knowledge.”
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Thomas Riffelmacher, Ph.D.
“SPARK is perfect for this project because this is an entirely new research direction, and I would need preliminary data before I could apply for larger NIH grants.”
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2023 SPARK Winners

Erik Ehinger
“The SPARK program is a unique opportunity for this stage of my career. When other people believe in you enough to put their money towards your idea, especially through donations, that’s a substantial force to motivate you.”
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Felix Nettersheim, M.D.
“Winning a SPARK award would show me that someone believes in my idea enough to invest in it. I would be highly motivated to repay these investors by showing them that their money was used for something meaningful.”
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Dawid Zyla, Ph.D.
“Winning a SPARK award would allow me to pursue my own idea and give me the experience of managing my own project budget, which would be helpful to my future career as an independent researcher.”
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Gregory Williams, Ph.D.
“Winning a SPARK award would be extremely motivating because it’s the reviewers saying that you’re asking the right questions and going about it the right way. It’s reassuring for others to tell you that you’re here for the right reasons and that you’re doing good work.”
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2022 SPARK Winners

Heather Callaway, Ph.D.
"Winning a SPARK Award would give me an opportunity to take what I’ve learned from working on the structure of rabies virus in the lab and apply it to the real world to help save lives."
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Maria Inês Matias, Ph.D.
"I applied to the SPARK program because it's a great opportunity to have the possibility of being funded at the beginning of a project. This funding is critical to generate our preliminary data and show our ideas have potential. It's just an opportunity that you can't miss."
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Melissa Meyer, Ph.D.
“Securing funding in the scientific arena for young investigators is incredibly difficult -- yet it's super imperative to our career survival. So winning a SPARK Award would really motivate me to continue my pursuit of an academic career and also to contribute to new ideas around neutrophils.”
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Estefania Quesada-Masachs, M.D. Ph.D.
"I reapplied to the SPARK program this year, because I have a new scientific question about type 1 diabetes and I think this funding would help lead to that answer. In my experience, this kind of unique funding opportunity can help open a new line of research that I can then continue to follow."
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Priyanka Saminathan, Ph.D.
"I believe when you choose to invest in early-career researchers, such as myself and the other SPARK finalists, you not only invest in our careers, but also our vision for a better tomorrow and a greater future for everyone. Thank you for being the citizens that the world needs today."
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Gurupreet S. Sethi, Ph.D.
"I would like to convey my sincere thanks to all the kind SPARK donors for motivating and supporting scientists like us. You are one of the reasons that we are allowed to think out of the box and believe we can actually contribute to LJI’s vision of life without disease."
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About the Tullie and Rickey Families

We’d like to thank and recognize the incredible support and generosity of LJI Board Director Tom Tullie and his wife Judy, as well as LJI Board Director Dave Rickey and his wife, Brenda, and their families. Their joint commitments to the SPARK program made in 2019 meant LJI has the assurance that this program will have funding in place for several awards a year for the next decade. That year, LJI honored their commitment by renaming the SPARK program to The Tullie and Rickey Families SPARK Awards for Innovations in Immunology.

Tom Tullie was one of the first SPARK pitch reviewers in 2018, and that was what drove him to get his family engaged in the program. “I’ve been an entrepreneur and involved in innovation my entire career, but this is the most exciting program I’ve seen because the ideas these young scientists have are not only fascinating, they have the potential to generate breakthrough discoveries that will someday save lives,” says Tom. Since then, Tom and his wife Judy and their daughters Jaqueline, Anna and Samantha have all taken part in the pitch review process.

For the Rickeys, involvement in the SPARK program was spurred by an invitation from Tom and also by the couple’s belief in the Institute’s mission. “Brenda and I love the idea of ‘life without disease’ because so many of our friends and family have suffered or died from cancer, heart problems, dementia, and other ailments,” Dave says. The Rickeys were attracted to the SPARK program largely due to its structure and opportunity to drive research forward. “In the philanthropy world, we like to give money where there will be a return. This program is really tangible and it’s good to see.”

From left to right: Judy and Tom Tullie, Dave and Brenda Rickey

The Tullie and Rickey families hope that by ensuring the program’s longevity, other donors will be inspired to contribute to the program to fund additional awards and get as many of these ideas off the ground as possible. “I’d love to see people join us,” shares Tom, “I guarantee you that it will be well worth our investment because these ideas are unbelievable and they need to get funded.”

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