University of Hawai‘i at Manoa Professor Alika Maunakea was named ARCS Foundation Honolulu Chapterʻs ARCS Scientist of the Year in recognition of his groundbreaking work in epigenetics — gene-environment interactions that underlie disease development.
Funded by National Institutes of Health grants throughout his 20-plus year career, Dr. Maunakea has helped secure more than $27 million in extramural funding for UH Manoaʻs John A. Burns School of Medicine, where he established and oversees the Epigenomics Core Facility of Hawaiʻi. He has developed technologies to survey DNA modifications central to epigenetic processes and made other important contributions to the field.
![From left: ARCS Honolulu Co-President Cheryl Ernst, Dr. Alika Maunakea, Board Member Jane Schoonmaker](https://honolulu.arcsfoundation.org/sites/arcsfoundation.org/files/HNL-2024ScientistOfYear.jpg)
He also mentors students (including 2022 ARCS Scholar Nina Allan) and promotes opportunities to ensure a student body and research workforce that iclude underrepresented groups.
Dr. Maunakea is a gradute of Creighton University and the University of California, San Francisco, and was a National Institutes of Health post-doctoral fellow before joining the UH Manoa faculty.