Professor, Chair
T cell activation, differentiation, and responses to infection and how these processes are regulated by T cell antigen receptor signaling
Professor, Vice Chair
Genetic and molecular approaches to infection and pathogenesis by lymphotropic herpesviruses
FRIDAY, May 16, 2024 | 12:00 AM
P18-1000 Hensel Phelps East Lecture Hall
ZOOM ID: 984 5836 2565
Leslie Berg, PhD and Aimee Pugh Bernard, PhD spoke in the CU Transforming Healthcare lecture series on “The Future of Immunotherapy: Breakthroughs Beyond Cancer.” Read more or Watch their presentation linked below.
Kyla Ost, PhD is the first featured scientist in the new column 'Meet the Scientist' in the CU Anschutz Today e-newsletter!! Read her article How Do We Keep Helpful Gut Microbes While Getting Rid of Bad Ones? here
Jordan Jacobelli, PhD, associate professor of immunology and microbiology, is corresponding author of an original research article published October 3 by Frontiers in Immunology. The manuscript identifies distinct cellular mechanisms by which the cytoskeletal proteins mDia1 and FMNL1 regulate T cell migration, in part by facilitating nucleus deformation to enable migration though confined environments. Four colleagues from our campus are co-authors. from A Message from Dean Sampson | October 14, 2024
Great news from the Morrison Laboratory!
Jenna Guthmiller, PhD, assistant professor of immunology and microbiology, received the Ann Palmenberg Junior Investigator Award at the American Society for Virology annual meeting on June 25. The award recognizes junior investigators who have made significant contributions to the field of virology and who display exceptional promise. Her lab studies how broadly protective humoral immunity against influenza viruses develops and can be harnessed by vaccination. Her expertise has been showcased in recent news reports about avian flu, including this article in the AAMC News and this report in The Denver Post.
Dr. Michael Schurr's lab from CU School of Medicine and Dr. Devatha Nair lab's CU School of Dental Medicine's spinout company, Azodent, Inc. received a RadLaunch award at RadTech for designing a polymer coating that can be used to prevent biofilm accumulation and infections on implants, prostheses, catheters, and endoscopes.