Matthew Griffin
Our lab focuses on understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying host-microbiota interactions during cancer progression and treatment.
Our lab focuses on understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying host-microbiota interactions during cancer progression and treatment.
The Gonen lab studies proteins implicated in disease by cryogenic electron microscopy, biochemistry and computational modeling.
Long-range cell-to-cell communication via specialized cellular protrusions in development/homeostasis and disease contexts
We are developing novel innate immune agonist drugs for cancer therapy. We are investigating tumor microbiomes and microbial-based cancer therapies.
We study mechanisms that control Regulator of G protein Signaling (RGS) protein function and develop strategies for early drug discovery.
We develop super-resolution microscopy and spatial multiomics methods to study aging and cancer at from molecular to organ levels.
We focus on kidney and breast cancer. We study tumor suppressors and oncogenes, as well as tumor cell microenvironment (especially
Prostate cancer disparities, ovarian cancer, cervical cancer, bioinformatics, epigenetics
Cancer etiology, cancer genetics, genome integrity, DNA double-strand break repair, and cancer health disparities in underrepresented groups