Immunology & Microbiology Research Labs

Host-Pathogen Interactions Research

LabWhat we work on
David J. Barton, PhD​The Barton lab studies RNA viruses and host endoribonucleases. An RNA element within group C enteroviruses inhibits ribonuclease L - protecting the virus from this antiviral endoribonuclease. We use deep sequencing methods - in collaboration with the Hesselberth lab - to examine how endoribonucleases influence health and disease
Kelly Doran, PhDMy lab seeks to elucidate the mechanisms by which Group B streptococcus colonizes the vaginal tract during pregnancy and penetrates the blood-brain barrier in the newborn to cause meningitis.  We use molecular genetic approaches as well as cell based and animal models to identify bacterial virulence determinants and host factors that contribute to disease progression
Breck A. Duerkop, PhDMy current research focuses on intestinal bacteria and bacteriophages. We employ culture-based approaches, animal models, and computational methods to study how intestinal bacteriophages impact the interactions of bacteria with their mammalian hosts
Alexander Horswill, PhDSocial activities of Staphylococci and host-pathogen interactions
Marjke Keestra-Gounder, PhDMy research focusses on elucidating pathways of innate immunity in response to Salmonella Typhimurium and Citrobacter rodentium
Laurel Lenz, PhDWe study how bacterial pathogens interact with myeloid and other innate immune cells, with an emphasis on their exploitation of interferons and natural killer cells
Thomas E. Morrison, PhDImmunological mechanisms that influence the clearance or persistence of arboviruses and protozoan parasites; Molecular mechanisms by which pathogens counteract host innate and adaptive immune responses
R. Lee Reinhardt, PhDMy lab studies type-2 immunity in the context of allergic disease (asthma, allergy, atopic dermatitis) as well as the host response to neglected tropical diseases caused by parasitic helminth and leishmania infection. We also have ongoing research in models of autoinflammatory disease
Rosemary Rochford, PhDMy lab does research on two human pathogens, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and Plasmodium falciparum and their etiologic link to Burkitt's lymphoma, the most common childhood cancer in Sub-Sahara Africa
Brian Russo, PhDWe are interested in determining the molecular mechanisms by which bacteria interact with cells. Our research is focused on Shigella flexneri
Michael Schurr, PhDThe Schurr laboratory is interested in mechanisms of transcriptional regulation in bacterial pathogenesis and is focused on a Pseudomonas aeruginosa global two-component regulator, AlgZR that controls at least 155 genes. We are using transcriptional profiling, genetics, molecular biology and biochemistry to determine the genes controlled and conditions of expression used by P. aeruginosa for these regulators
Linda van Dyk, PhDThe van Dyk lab investigates molecular interactions between virus and host that impact infection and cancer. The main projects in the lab include analysis of a virus encoded cyclin with a host tumor suppressor protein and characterization of non-coding RNAs that regulate the innate immune response and chronic infection
Andres Vazquez-Torres, DVM, PhDOur group studies innate host defenses of macrophages against intracellular bacterial and protozoan pathogens

 

Immunology Research

LabDescription
Scott Alper, PhDThe Alper lab is  focused on understanding the regulation of the innate immune response, particularly as it relates to the basis for inflammatory diseases
Rocky Baker, PhD​I have focused my research on understanding how islet-reactive CD4 T cells are activated in the context of T1D and investigating their contribution to the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes
John C. Cambier, PhD​In vivo biology and signaling in naïve and autoreactive human B cells, molecular function of autoimmunity risk alleles operative in regulatory signaling pathways in B cells, and STING function in B cells
Zhangguo Chen, PhDMy research interest is to elucidate the mechanisms of signaling control of class switch recombination and its application in autoimmunity
Rachel Friedman, PhD​We focus on understanding how T cell tolerance is maintained or broken by cellular and environmental factors at the disease site during autoimmunity, particularly in diabetes
James Hagman, PhD​Work in our laboratory addresses the regulation of normal lymphocyte development by transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms; oncogenes and leukemogenesis; and transcriptional control of autoimmunity
Peter Henson, PhD​Cell biology of the mononuclear phagocyte system with relation to inflammation, innate and adaptive immunity and maintenance of, or return to, normal tissue homeostasis
Elena Hsieh, MDOur goal is to enable a deeper understanding of normal pediatric immune development, dysregulated immune processes in children with immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, and the overlap between the two
Hua Huang, PhDWe study signaling and transcriptional regulation of genes that control innate effector cell development and function, with a focus on how master transcription factors induce a network of downstream transcription factors and how these transcription factors and their associated enhancers and promoters detect signal inputs triggered by immunological stimuli and convert them into transcriptional outputs in the normal and diseased immune system
Jordan Jacobelli, PhD​The Jacobelli lab works on characterizing the molecular regulation of lymphocyte migration, cell-cell interactions, and activation during immune surveillance and in disease settings such as autoimmunity and cancer
Ross Kedl, PhD​Most inflammation seems best suited for making more inflammation, not for giving T cells the signals they need to expand and survive.  My lab studies what innate signals are able to facilitate the transition between innate and adaptive responses and how that information can be best utilized in the making of novel vaccines that produce therapeutically effective T cell responses
Laurel Lenz, PhDWe study mechanisms for regulation of innate immune responses with an emphasis on how interferons and natural killer cells impact myeloid cell responses
Rebecca O'Brien, PhD​The overall goal of my lab is to investigate the role of gamma/delta T cells in immune responses and inflammation.  Using autoimmune disease models, we are investigating how some of these cells exacerbate autoimmunity by promoting inflammation, whereas others have an immunoregulatory effect
Roberta Pelanda, PhDThe Pelanda lab studies the B cell intrinsic and extrinsic signals that guide the development, selection and activation of autoreactive and non-autoreactive B cells and of autoantibody-producing cells in both mice and humans, with the goal of understanding potential causes of immunodeficiencies and autoimmune diseases
R. Lee Reinhardt, PhDMy lab studies type-2 immunity in the context of allergic disease (asthma, allergy, atopic dermatitis) as well as the host response to neglected tropical diseases caused by parasitic helminth and leishmania infection. We also have ongoing research in models of autoinflammatory disease
David Riches, PhDOur lab is focused on investigating the mechanism involved in the development and resolution of lung inflammation and fibrosis, especially the cross talk between macrophages and fibroblasts
Rosemary Rochford, PhD​My lab studies the T cell tropism of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) Type 2 strain.  In addition, we are evaluating the development of immunity to EBV and P. falciparum malaria in an infant cohort based in western Kenya
Jill Slansky, PhD​We are interested in how cancer and the immune system interact on many levels, but mainly focus on how CD8 T cells recognize tumor antigens in people and animals
Raul Torres, PhDWe have a long-standing interest in investigating the mechanisms by which B lymphocytes develop and subsequently mount antibody responses to foreign antigens and pathogens
Linda van Dyk, PhD​The van Dyk lab investigates molecular interactions between virus and host that impact infection and cancer. The main projects in the lab include analysis of a virus encoded cyclin with a host tumor suppressor protein and characterization of non-coding RNAs that regulate the innate immune response and chronic infection
Jing Wang, MD, PhDOur research focuses on molecular mechanism of somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class switch recombination (CSR) in B lymphocytes and mechanisms of immune evasion in B cell lymphomas or head neck squamous carcinomas (HNSCC)
Gongyi Zhang, PhD1) Epigenetic regulation in T and B cells; 2) Neurodegenerative diseases and Inflammation

 

Microbiology Research

LabDescription
David J. Barton, PhDThe Barton lab studies picornaviruses and viral RNA replication. In collaboration with Olve Peersen at CSU, we seek to understand how structural features in the viral polymerase influence viral RNA recombination & error catastrophe
Kelly Doran, PhDMy lab seeks to elucidate the mechanisms by which Group B streptococcus colonizes the vaginal tract during pregnancy and penetrates the blood-brain barrier in the newborn to cause meningitis.  We use molecular genetic approaches as well as cell based and animal models to identify bacterial virulence determinants and host factors that contribute to disease progression
Breck Duerkop, PhDMy current research focuses on intestinal bacteria and bacteriophages. We employ culture-based approaches, animal models, and computational methods to study how intestinal bacteriophages impact the interactions of bacteria with their mammalian hosts
Alexander Horswill, PhD​Social activities of Staphylococci and host-pathogen interactions
Marjke Keestra-Gounder, PhDMy research focusses on elucidating pathways of innate immunity in response to Salmonella Typhimurium and Citrobacter rodentium
Laurel Lenz, PhDWe study how Listeria monocytogenes and other bacteria manipulate mammalian cell biology to establish and propagate infections
Thomas E. Morrison, PhDMolecular pathogenesis of acute and chronic disease caused by arthropod-borne viruses and protozoan parasites
Rosemary Rochford, PhDMy lab has developed the only available pre-clinical humanized mouse model to test for hemolytic toxicity of anti-malaria drugs in the context of G6PD deficiency. We are developing this model to further study Plasmodium infection in G6PDd hosts
Brian Russo, PhDWe are interested in determining the molecular mechanisms by which bacteria interact with cells. Our research is focused on Shigella flexneri
Michael Schurr, PhDThe Schurr laboratory is interested in mechanisms of transcriptional regulation in bacterial pathogenesis and is focused on a Pseudomonas aeruginosa global two-component regulator, AlgZR that controls at least 155 genes. We are using transcriptional profiling, genetics, molecular biology and biochemistry to determine the genes controlled and conditions of expression used by P. aeruginosa for these regulators
Linda van Dyk, PhDThe van Dyk lab investigates molecular interactions between virus and host that impact infection and cancer. The main projects in the lab include analysis of a virus encoded cyclin with a host tumor suppressor protein and characterization of non-coding RNAs that regulate the innate immune response and chronic infection
Andres Vazquez-Torres, DVM, PhDOur group investigates the adaptive responses of Salmonella, E. coli and Leishmania to oxidative and nitrosative stress that make these intracellular pathogens common causes of morbidity and mortality in humans

 

Research Core Labs

HI3 Cores: Human Immune Monitoring Shared Resource (HIMSR)

Director: Jill Slansky

Assistant Director: Kimberly Jordan

Website: The Human Immune Monitoring Shared Resource at CU|AMC

 

HI3 Cores: Pre-clinical Human Immune System Mice Share Resource (PHISM)

Director: Roberta Pelanda

Co-Director: Julie Lang

Website: Pre-clinical Human Immune System Mouse model and Analysis Shared Resource

 

Mouse Genetics Core Facility (Transgenics)

Director: Jennifer Matsuda

Administrator: Bernadine Sena

Website: Mouse Genetics

 

Gnotobiotic Core

Director: Kristi Kuhn

Technician: Cassandra Levens

Website: Gnotobiotic Core

Immunology Microbiology (SOM)

CU Anschutz

Research I North

12800 East 19th Avenue

Mail Stop 8333

Aurora, CO 80045

303-724-4224


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