Learn about upcoming events and recent news from 老司机福利网's Institute for Translational Neuroscience.
Pharmacology and Physiology Doubles Number of Postdoctoral Fellows
The Institute for Translational Neuroscience 3rd annual Research Symposium, (Neuroday)
will take place in person on Friday, Nov. 1, 2024. Our keynote speaker is , a senior scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children and professor in the Department
of Physiology at the University of Toronto. In addition to the keynote address, there
will be talks by several prominent St. Louis-based researchers, a poster session and
reception.
is now open for talks and poster presentations. Deadline for submission is Oct. 15,
2024. Monetary prizes will be awarded to the top poster presentations.
This event is free and open to the public. before Friday, Oct. 18.
Do you want to join a committee, contact a member of our committees, or have a question on how to be more involved with all things ITN? Check out our line up below-
- Executive Leadership Team:
- Daniela Salvemini, Ph.D. (chair)
- Silviya Zustiak, Ph.D. (associate chair)
- George Grossberg, M.D.
- Rick Samson, Ph.D.
- Tony Buschanan, Ph.D.
- Jafar Kafaie, M.D., Ph.D.
- Daniela Salvemini, Ph.D. (chair)
- Research Committee:
- Susan Farr, Ph.D. (chair)
- Aubin Moutal, Ph.D. (co-chair)
- Philippe Mercier, M.D., Ph.D.
- John Walker, Ph.D.
- Fenglian Xu, Ph.D.
- Yuna Ayala, Ph.D.
- Susan Farr, Ph.D. (chair)
- Education and Student-Postdoctoral:
- Mark Knuepfer, Ph.D. (chair)
- Tim Doyle, Ph.D.
- Stephanie Michalski, Ph.D. (chair)
- Mark Knuepfer, Ph.D. (chair)
Vincenza Cifarelli, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology has been awarded a President Research Fund (PRF) of $50,000.00. The grant titled, "Determining the role of a novel E3 ligase Ube4A in intestinal function and IBD" will allow Cifarelli along with Anutosh Chakraborty, Ph.D., associate professor also in the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, to decipher mechanisms by which the Ube4A protein regulates intestinal function and disease. The project will utilize new mouse models and various cutting-edge tools to define novel mechanisms that cause intestinal diseases and may offer new therapeutic strategies for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease and colitis.
The 老司机福利网 Department of Pharmacology and Physiology seeks highly motivated investigators at the assistant/associate professor level within the tenure track. The search is part of a four-year cluster hiring process to grow pain research. The Department of Pharmacology and Physiology is a vibrant, dynamic, multidisciplinary and highly collaborative department that offers access to excellent core facilities and opportunities to join collaborative centers including the Institute for Translational Neuroscience and Institute for Drug and Biotherapeutic Innovation, the Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences, the Vaccine Center and the Liver Center. Members of our community have access to the nationally acclaimed Cortex Innovation Community, to multiple local startup-supporting institutions and to the fast-growing, cutting-edge medical and biotechnology community which operates actively throughout the St. Louis region. Candidates involved in related disciplines with a focus on pain, such as drug discovery, structural biology and chemical biology are strongly encouraged to apply. The requisition number is 2023-07662.
Juliana Navia Pelaez, Ph.D. joined the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, on Feb. 1, 2024, as assistant professor (TT). Navia Pelaez completed her graduate studies in vascular biology at UFMG, Brazil, focusing on cellular responses to oxidized lipids. Subsequently, she pursued postdoctoral training in pain and metabolism at the University of California, San Diego, under the dual mentorship of Tony Yaksh (vice chair for research in anesthesiology and Distinguished Professor in Anesthesiology and Pharmacology) and Yury Miller (M.D., Ph.D.; professor of medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism). As a postdoc, her findings, which revealed increased lipid rafts and intracellular lipid storage in microglia and neurons, contributed to the growing knowledge linking dysregulated lipid metabolism to hypersensitivity and pain states. Now, she is set to lead a new laboratory at SLU in the Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, dedicated to understanding how lipid metabolism influences pain states and susceptibility to chronic pain. Her research will primarily investigate immuno-metabolic changes and the related transcriptional regulation underlying chronic pain development. Leveraging diverse animal models of chronic pain and advanced omics and biochemistry tools, her lab will explore neuroimmune interactions, cellular reprogramming, and metabolic shifts across various cell types involved in nociceptive pathways, particularly macrophages and microglia. The lab aims to discover early pain biomarkers and uncover new pathways and potential therapeutic targets for treating various chronic pain conditions.
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