Studying how inflammation drives memory formation in human barrier tissues

Our research

Characterizing how inflammation changes the ecology of barrier tissues, cell by cell

We are developing an interdisciplinary training environment composed of immunologists, engineers, computational biologists, and others that harnesses emerging techniques to answer fundamental questions of biological and clinical relevance in barrier tissue biology. We use a variety of techniques such as single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), organoid models, epigenetic profiling, flow cytometry, and microscopy in an effort to answer pressing questions surrounding human health and disease. The fundamental questions we try to answer through our work in the lab are: Which cellular compartments harbor memories of inflammation in tissue, and how might we develop effective mechanisms by which to promote or erase them? In short, where are health and disease stored in a tissue?

Research

Our team

Our lab is composed of scientists who double as thespians, bargain hunters, marathoners, espresso experts, and more. Get to know the people who make the magic happen!

Meet the Team

Publications

Check out some of our findings as we work to better understand the cellular mechanisms that drive and sustain health and disease within barrier tissue like the skin, gut, and airway.

Publications

Our lab is guided by core values

Conduct science that improves the lives of others and works in service of humanity


Advance collective knowledge through robust, creative scientific approaches


Champion accessible, equitable science through collaboration, openly-shared data and resources


Foster a culture that celebrates differences in backgrounds, life experiences, and perspectives

Affiliations