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Antoine Louveau, PhD
Assistant ProfessorCleveland Clinic Lerner College of MedicineLerner Research Institute, Cleveland ClinicSchool of MedicineEmail: louveaa@ccf.org
Our lab is interested in the role of the brain barriers (meninges, choroid plexus and blood brain barrier) in the context of neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases. Particularly, we are interested how the immune cells, vascular cells and stromal cells interact with each other to modulate glial and neuronal function. We use a combination of imaging (macroscopic, confocal, in vivo), flow cytometry (regular and spectral), in vivo intervention (surgeries, pharmacological and genetic) and behavior in mouse models of Autism spectrum disorders and Alzheimer's disease. Our approaches aim at developing new and unconventional therapeutic targets for these disorders.
Joseph M. Luna, PhD
Assistant ProfessorDepartment of BiochemistrySchool of MedicineMemberCenter for RNA Science and TherapeuticsSchool of MedicineMemberCancer Genomics and Epigenomics ProgramCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterEmail: joseph.luna@case.edu
Phone: 216.368.1119
Our lab explores topics at the interface between molecular virology and the systems-level host response to RNA virus infections, with a special emphasis on RNA driven processes. Incorporating classic virology approaches with innovative sequencing and imaging methods, our approach emphasizes the investigation of host-pathogen interactions in a diverse array of disease-relevant contexts, from COVID-19 to cancer.
Peder Lund, PhD
Assistant ProfessorDepartment of NutritionSchool of MedicineEmail: peder.lund@case.edu
Our lab is generally interested in how resident microbes in the gut interact with the host epithelium to promote homeostasis and how these interactions become altered in pathological states like inflammatory bowel disease. Specifically, we study how small molecules produced by microbes serve as metabolic precursors and receptor ligands, thereby influencing energy balance and gene expression in host cells.
Donal S. Luse , PhD
Lerner Research InstituteCleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve UniversityEmail: donal.luse@case.edu
Phone: 216.445.7688
I research Eukaryotic gene transcription and RNA polymerase.
Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski, MD, PhD
ProfessorDepartment of MedicineSchool of MedicineProfessorDepartment of PathologySchool of MedicineAssociate Director for Translational ResearchCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterMemberCancer Genomics and Epigenomics ProgramCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterEmail: maciejj@ccf.org
Phone: 216.445.5962
My areas of investigation include hematology and pathophysiology of hematologic diseases including bone marrow failure syndromes (BMFS).
Ganapati Mahabaleshwar, PhD
Associate ProfessorDepartment of PathologySchool of MedicineEmail: ghm4@case.edu
Phone: 216.368.5998
I research transcriptional regulation of inflammatory response.
Danny Manor, PhD
ProfessorDepartment of NutritionSchool of MedicineVice ChairDepartment of NutritionSchool of MedicineProfessorDepartment of PharmacologySchool of MedicineMemberMolecular Oncology ProgramCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterEmail: dxm178@case.edu
Phone: 216.368.6230
I focus on signal transduction pathways that regulate normal cell growth and are disrupted by oncogenic mutations. In addition, I research molecular mechanisms underlying cancer chemo-preventative agents such as vitamin E.
Sanford Markowitz, MD, PhD
Ingalls Professor of Cancer GeneticsDepartment of MedicineSchool of MedicineProfessorDepartment of Genetics and Genome SciencesSchool of MedicineProfessorDepartment of Molecular Biology and MicrobiologySchool of MedicinePrincipal InvestigatorCase GI SPORECase Comprehensive Cancer CenterMemberCancer Genomics and Epigenomics ProgramCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterEmail: sxm10@case.edu
Phone: 216-368-1976
My research is primarily focused on the molecular biology of colon cancer, functional influence of oncogenes and suppressor genes on transformation, metastasis, and response to therapies.
Kenneth Matreyek, PhD
Assistant ProfessorDepartment of PathologySchool of MedicineMemberCleveland Center for Membrane & Structural BiologySchool of MedicineEmail: kenneth.matreyek@case.edu
Phone: 216.368.0626
I perform large-scale mutational experiments characterizing the impacts of protein coding variants on cell function, including infectious diseases and immunity.
Shigemi Matsuyama, DVM, PhD
Associate ProfessorDepartment of Ophthalmology and Visual SciencesSchool of MedicineAssociate ProfessorDepartment of PathologySchool of MedicineAssociate ProfessorDepartment of PharmacologySchool of MedicineAssociate ProfessorHematology and OncologyDepartment of MedicineAssociate ProfessorDivision of General Medical SciencesAssociate ProfessorCase Western Reserve UniversityAssociate ProfessorCase Comprehensive Cancer CenterEmail: sxm193@case.edu
Phone: 216.368.5832
My research includes cell death regulation, mechanism of epigenetic aging, the biological significance of DNA methylation age determining the timing of death, and the development of cell death inhibiting small compounds.
Primary appointment - Ophthalmology
Other appointments - Pharmacology, Pathology, General Medical Science, Case Comprehensive Cancer Center