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My laboratory studies how bacteria colonize our bodies for long periods of time, and how interactions between bacteria and the epithelial surfaces of the gastrointestinal tract and skin may lead to disease. Epithelial surfaces are the first barrier against infection, but they also where our bodies meet and co-evolve with the microbial world.. Several of our studies have focused on the epithelial junctions as a target for bacterial pathogens. The host epithelium uses its epithelial junctions to form a tight but dynamic barrier with an external surface that is inhospitable to microbial attachment, secretes anti-microbial compounds, and has a rapid rate of self-renewal. The balance in the microbe-epithelial relationship results in silent commensalism or symbiosis; an imbalance results in diseases ranging from acute bacterial invasive disease to chronic ulcers or carcinoma.
Our laboratory has developed novel microscopy applications such as quantitative 3D confocal microscopy, electron microscopy, time-lapse imaging, microinjection and micromanipulation to visualize the interaction of pathogens with epithelial cells in culture and in animal and human tissues. Many of out studies focus on the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori, but we have also expanded our investigations to include the intestinal pathogens Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella enterica, and the skin pathogen and colonizer Staphylococcus aureus. I believe that elucidating how microbes communicate with and alter our epithelial cells at a molecular level will be important for finding novel therapeutic targets to control mucosal colonization and prevent invasive disease.
Our laboratory has developed novel microscopy applications such as quantitative 3D confocal microscopy, electron microscopy, time-lapse imaging, microinjection and micromanipulation to visualize the interaction of pathogens with epithelial cells in culture and in animal and human tissues. Many of out studies focus on the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori, but we have also expanded our investigations to include the intestinal pathogens Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella enterica, and the skin pathogen and colonizer Staphylococcus aureus. I believe that elucidating how microbes communicate with and alter our epithelial cells at a molecular level will be important for finding novel therapeutic targets to control mucosal colonization and prevent invasive disease.
Research Interests
Papers共 107 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
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Robert J Huang, Ignacio A Wichmann, Andrew Su,Anuja Sathe, Miranda V Shum,Susan M Grimes, Rithika Meka,Alison Almeda, Xiangqi Bai,Jeanne Shen,Quan Nguyen, Ingrid Luo,Summer S Han,Manuel R Amieva,Joo Ha Hwang,Hanlee P Ji
NPJ precision oncologyno. 1 (2025): 52-52
Gastroenterologyno. 5 (2024): S-51
Ignacio A. Wichmann,Robert J. Huang,Andrew Su,Anuja Sathe, Miranda V. Shum,Susan M. Grimes, Rithika Meka,Alison Almeda,Xiangqi Bai,Jeanne Shen,Quan Nguyen,Manuel Amieva,Joo Ha Hwang,Hanlee P. Ji
Cancer Researchno. 6_Supplement (2024): 1140-1140
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGYno. 1 (2023)
Nature Protocolsno. 11 (2021): 5171-5192
LM Massis, S Ruddle,SM Brewer,R Schade, R Narasimhan, JD Honeycutt, THM Pham,JA McKenna,SW Brubaker,P Chairatana,JA Klein,M Margalef-Català,MR Amieva, JG Vilches-Moure,DM Monack
bioRxiv (2021)
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Author Statistics
#Papers: 107
#Citation: 9050
H-Index: 41
G-Index: 75
Sociability: 6
Diversity: 3
Activity: 9
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