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Biochemistry Molecular Microbiology & Immunology Molecular Medicine Neuroscience Physical Rehabilitation Science
Biochemistry Molecular Microbiology & Immunology Molecular Medicine Neuroscience Public Health
Faculty 

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Thomas W. Abrams, Ph.D. 410-706-5837  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie synaptic changes during learning.
Eugene Albrecht, Ph.D. 410-706-3391  Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences
Research: Pregnancy, placental and fetal development, reproductive endocrinology
Edson X. Albuquerque, M.D., Ph.D. 4l0-706-7333  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Effects of endogenous substances, toxins and clinically relevant drugs on nicotinic receptor function and expression, synaptic transmission and synaptic plasticity in the brain.
Bradley E. Alger 410-706-3350  Department of Physiology
Research: We study the 'brain's own marijuana', the endogenous system that uses the same receptors that marijuana affects, to regulate neuronal communication in the hippocampus. Our current focus is on LTP, LT
Manickavasagom Alkondon, Ph.D. 410 706 3563  Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Nicotine addiction research; Patch-clamp techniques using brain slices (rat and human); Physiology of nicotinic receptor-dependent neurocircuitries; Pharmacological characterization of brain nicotini
Gad Alon, PhD, PT 410-706-7733  Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science
Research: Limb Amputation Management, Therapeutic Technologies, and Neuro-Rehabilitation
Karen Anderson, M.D. 410-328-7809  Departments of Psychiatry and Neurology
Research: Behavioral symptoms in patients with movement disorders (Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease); Deep brain stimulation therapy for movement disorders brain imaging; Clinical trials for neurologic
Vanessa C.Z. Anseloni, Psy.D., Ph.D. 410-706-3673  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: My research focus is on understanding the neurobiology of neonatal pain.
Toni M. Antalis, Ph.D. 410 706-8222  Department of Physiology
Research: Molecular biology of angiogenesis and cancer; membrane serine proteases and their inhibitors; regulation of transcription factors by serpins; plasminogen activation and extracellular matrix remodeling
Sergei Atamas, M.D., Ph.D. 410-605-7000 x6468 or
410-706-6474 
Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Department of Medicine
Research: Immune and inflammatory mechanisms of tissue fibrosis
Laure Aurelian, Ph.D. 410-706-3895  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Ongoing studies are focused on understanding the molecular mechanism of H11 induced apoptosis, its regulation and its role in melanoma development.
Abdu Azad, Ph.D. 410-706-3335  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: Our long-term goal is to assess the importance of rickettsial genes encoding virulence-associated proteins and their use in immunoprotection against pathogenic rickettsiae.
Nicholas R. Bachur, M.D., Ph.D. 410-708-3689 
Research: My clinical and research interests continue to center on DNA interactive molecules.
Guang Bai, M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-2082  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: Genetic Regulation of the Glutamate Receptor Genes; Signal Transduction and Nuclear Targets
Linda Bambrick, Ph.D. 410-706-3418  Anesthesiology Research
Research: Free radical generation and neuroprotection.
Eileen Barry, Ph.D. 410-706-3702  Department of Medicine/Center for Vaccine Development
Research: The research in my laboratory is focused on the development of live, attenuated bacterial strains which can be used as vaccines delivered by the oral route.
Nasir Bashirelahi, Ph.D.   Department of Biomedical Sciences, Dental School

Patrik Bavoil, Ph.D. 410-706-6789  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: Chlamydia genomics; Molecular pathogenesis of Chlamydia species and chlamydiaphages
Roy Bechtel, PhD, PT 410-706-4544  Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science
Research: Spine, Pelvis, and SI Joint mechanics and function
Alexey Belkin, Ph.D. 410-706-8031  Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: Cell-matrix interactions, cell migration, integrins, transglutaminases
Rita Sloan Berndt, Ph.D. 410-706-5874  Department of Neurology
Research: My research interests focus on the representation of language processes in the brain.
Christopher T. Bever, M.D. 410-705-7060  Neurology
Research: Biochemical mechanisms of myelin damage in multiple sclerosis, particularly the role of macrophage proteinases and their modulation by interferons and other agents
Lindsay W. Black, Ph.D. 410-706-3510  Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: Mechanism of viral DNA packaging, and phage display for protein interactions and vaccine development.
Tom Blanchard, Ph.D. 410-706-1772  Department of Pediatrics
Research: My primary interests involve immune regulation and response in the gastrointestinal tract where the body is in continuous contact with commensal and pathogenic bacteria.
Thomas Blanpied, Ph.D. 410-706-4769  Department of Physiology
Research: Protein trafficking mechanisms underlying synaptic function and synapse plasticity.
Mordecai P. Blaustein, M.D. 410-706-3345  Department of Physiology
Research: My research concerns the regulation of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and its role in normal and pathological cell signaling, especially in vascular smooth muscle (with a focus on the pathogenes
Mimi Blitzer, Ph.D. 410-706-4065  Department of Pediatrics
Research: Biochemical and metabolic genetic disorders
Robert J. Bloch, Ph.D. (410)706-3020  Department of Physiology
Research: Membrane Domains and Membrane Organization in Nerve and Muscle; Postsynaptic Membrane Domains; Organization of Intracellular Membranes; Organization of the Sarcolemma into Costameres; The Role of Obsc
Meredith Bond, Ph.D. 410-706-1922  Department of Physiology
Research: Beta-adrenergic signaling pathways in heart failure; role of A-kinase Anchoring Proteins (AKAPs) in protein kinase A (PKA) targeting. Gene expression signatures of heart failure.
Angela Brodie, Ph.D. 410-706-3137  Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Molecular Mechanism Involved in the Response of Breast and Prostate Cancer to Endocrine Treatment: Development and Optimization of Novel Therapies.
Neville Brookes, Ph.D. 410-706-3565  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Our laboratory studies how brain cells integrate and coordinate the various membrane transport activities controlling the fluxes and compartmentation of amino acid neurotransmitters and their metaboli
Angelika Burger, Ph.D. 410-708-7462  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Her research focus is the identification and validation of new molecular targets and molecularly targeted agents.
Martha W. Burton, Ph.D. 410-706-8690  Department of Neurology
Research: My current research focuses on the functional neuroanatomy of language processing.
C. Allen Bush, Ph.D. 410-455-2506  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC

Norman F. Capra, Ph.D. 410-706-4219  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: Research in my laboratory is directed toward understanding the neural basis for perception of jaw position and changes in jaw position (mandibular kinesthesia).
Nicholas Carbonetti, Ph.D. 410-706-7677  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: Bordetella pertussis infection of the respiratory tract and the role of pertussis toxin in immunosuppression
Gregory Carey, Ph.D. 410-706-8191  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: We are investigating protein kinases in the PI3K/Akt and Ras signaling pathways and exploring ways to specifically activate protein phosphatases for tumor cell eradication and to better understand bet
Drew E. Carlson, Ph.D. 410-706-2598  Department of Surgery and Physiology
Research: Integrative Responses to Sepsis and Trauma
William T. Carpenter, M.D. 410-402-7201  Psychiatry
Research: Etiology, pathophysiology, and anatomy of schizophrenia
France Carrier, Ph.D. 410-706-5105  Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: Molecular Studies to counter carcinogenesis; the role of stress-activated RNA-binding proteins (RBP) in the genotoxic stress response; interactions of stress-activated proteins with chromatin DNA as a
Jan Cerny, M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-7114  Department of Microbiology and Immunology

Charles Chaffin, Ph.D. 410-706-3031  OB/GYN & Reproductive Sciences
Research: Ovarian physiology; regulation of granulosa cell proliferation and differentiation; cell cycle control during follicular maturation and corpus luteum formation; steriod regulation of ovarian cancer
Yen-Pei Chang, Ph.D. 410-706-6737  Epidemiology and Preventative Medicine
Research: My research currently focuses on identifying susceptibility loci of common, complex diseases and modifier genes of monogenic diseases.
Meenakshi Chellaiah, Ph.D. 410-706-2083  Dept of BMS
Research: Signaling mechanisms involved in bone remodeling and cancer cell progression. role of actin and actin-binding proteins in cell shape changes and migration. Focus is on osteoclasts (bone cells), huma
Feng Chen, Ph.D. 410-234-8866  Center of Marine Biotechnology
Research: Microbial Ecology and Physiology
Alan Cross, M.D. (410) 328-2565  Department of Medicine
Research: Development of bacterial vaccines; role of Gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in innate immunity; host defense mechanisms against bacterial infections; role of sialidase (neuraminidase)
Brian Cullum, Ph.D. 410-455-2833  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Development of optical spectroscopic techniques and technologies for biomedical and defense related applications.
Daniel Darlington, Ph.D. 410-706-8106  Surgery and Physiology
Research: Our lab is studying the biochemistry and pathophysiology of hemorrhagic and septic shock.
Shiladitya DasSarma, Ph.D. 410-234-8847  University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute
Research: Genomics, post-genomics and biotechnology of salt-loving microorganisms
Wendy Davidson, Ph.D. 410-706-8188  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: The major focus of my laboratory is to better understand the link between systemic autoimmunity and B cell lymphomagenesis.
Didier Depireux, Ph.D. 410-706-1273  Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology
Research: Encoding of Dynamic Spectrum in Auditory Cortex
Dean Dessem, Ph.D. 410-706-7257  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: neuronal circuits involved in proprioception and kinesthesia; neural control of movement
Louis J. DeTolla, V.M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-8537  Pathology
Research: Animal Models - Oncology; Animal Models - Tranplantation; Animal Models - Infectious Diseases
Anthony DeVico, Ph.D. 410-706-4680  Institute of Human Virology
Research: neutralizing immune response against the co-receptor binding domain of HIV-1 gp120
Michael Donnenberg, M.D. 410-706-7560  Department of Medicine
Research: Molecular Pathogenesis of E. coli Infections
Susan G. Dorsey, Ph.D. 410-706-7250  Organizational Systems and Adult Health
Research: Neurotrophin receptor signaling mechanisms underlying neuronal plasticity.
Alex Drohat, Ph.D. 410-706-8118  Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: structure and elucidate mechanism of DNA repair enzymes; the activity of DNA glycosylases is stimulated by AP endonuclease
Jim Shaojun Du, Ph.D. 410-234-8854  University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute
Research: Muscular dystrophies and skeletal diseases. Molecular regulation of muscle and bone development and myofibril assembly.
Ronald Dubner, D.D.S., Ph.D. 410-706-0860
410-706-0865 FAX 
Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: My research program through the years has focused on somatosensory mechanisms with an emphasis on pain.
Rich Eckert, Ph.D. 410-706-3220  Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Research: Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Greg Elmer, Ph.D. 410-402-7576  Department of Psychiatry, MPRC
Research: The primary objective of our laboratory is to better understand the behavior neurogenetics of drug abuse and schizophrenia and to understand the neurobiological factors integral to the comorbidity of
Cyril O Enwonwu, D.D.S., Ph.D. 410-706-7099  Department of Biomedical Sciences, Dental School
Research: Protein-Energy Malnutrition; Public Health and International Nutrition; Nutrition and Oral Health; Sub-cellular Effects of Nutrients; Nutrients and Gene Expression
Reha Erzurumlu, Ph.D. 410-706-7401  Anatomy and Neurobiology
Research: Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying axon-target interactions in mammalian sensory pathways
Daniele Fabris, Ph.D. 410-455-3053  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Our laboratory is dedicated to the structural and functional investigation of protein-nucleic acids complexes present in viruses responsible for infectious diseases, using mass spectrometry as the mai
Shengyun Fang, M.D., Ph.D. (410) 706-2220  Medical Biotechnology Center
Research: The ubiquitin proteasome pathway; Protein quality control in normal and disease conditions
Donna Farber, Ph.D. 410-706-7458  Departments of Surgery
Research: The focus of my research is on CD4 T cell memory and peripheral T cell differentiation.
Iain Farrance, Ph.D. 410-706-7469  Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: Regulation of transcription in cardiac and skeletal muscle.
Alessio Fasano, M.D. 410-706-5501  Pediatrics
Research: pathogenesis of autoimmune disease; Pathophysiology of intestinal peremeability; Molecular biology of cell-cell interaction at the epithelial and endothelial level; Intercellular tight junctions
Ricardo Feldman, Ph.D. 410-706-4197  Department of Microbiology and Immunology

Pei Feng, M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-7340  Biomedical Sciences
Research: Prostate Cancer Research; Zinc and Hormone related Signal Transduction Pathways in Cancer Research
James C. Fishbein, Ph.D. 410-455-2190  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Nitrosamine Carcinogens, Cancer Chemoprevention
Paul Fishman, M.D., Ph.D. 410-605-7000  Department of Neurology
Research: Alzheimer's Disease; Parkinson's Diseases and Related Neurodegenerative Diseases; Botulinum Toxin Treatments; Experimental Therapy Development; Deep Brain Stimulation for Movement Disorders
Gary Fiskum, Ph.D. 410-706-4711  Departments of Anesthesiology, Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, and Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Our research focuses on the molecular mechanisms responsible for neurodegeneration with emphasis on ischemic and traumatic brain injury and Parkinson's Disease.
Martin Flajnik, Ph.D. 410-706-5161  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: My work is centered on the evolution of the immune system, with the major goal being to understand the origins of adaptive immunity.
Larry Forrester, PhD 410-706-5212  Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science
Research: Motor Control; TMS and fMRI to assess CNS plasticity in chronic stroke patients who undergo treadmill training
Nancy Fossett, Ph.D. 410-706-2062  Center for Vascular and Inflammatory Diseases/Pathology
Research: We are interested how multi-cellular organisms develop from a single cell or fertilized oocyte. We accomplish this goal by studying how evolutionarily conserved factors regulate blood and heart cell
Ashraf Fouad, D.D.S. 410-706-7047  Department of Endodontics, Prothodontics & Operative Dentistry
Research: Microbial analysis of endodontic infections; Endodontic treatment outcomes; Determination of effective endodontic antimicrobial agents
Renty Franklin, Ph.D. 410-706-7259  Biomedical Sciences
Research: Hormone regulation of gene expression in the prostate and prostate cancer; zinc induction of apoptosis in prostate cancer cells
Claire Fraser-Liggett, Ph.D. 410-706-3879  Institute of Genome Sciences

Susan K. Fried, Ph.D. 410-706-4047  Department of Medicine
Research: The depot-specific regulation of adipocyte genes, including lipoprotein lipase & leptin in human adipose tissue.
Douglas O. Frost, Ph.D. 410-706-0413  Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Department of Anesthesiology
Research: Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying normal neural development and the perturbation of these mechanisms in disease states or by drugs. We also study how these mechanisms can be harnessed for
Amy Fulton, Ph.D.   Department of Pathology
Research: Breast cancer; mechanisms of metastasis; immune therapy; biological response modifiers
Robert Gallo, M.D. 410-706-8614 
Research: the development of an effective HIV preventive vaccine and the development of innovative HIV therapies
Ronald Gartenhaus, M.D. 410-328-3691  Medicine
Research: Lymphomagenesis; Molecular Genetics; Translational regulation
Alfredo Garzino-Demo, Ph.D. 410-706-4689  Institute of Human Virology
Research: role of chemokines that bind to CCR5 in protection from infection and disease progression
Anthony Gaspari, M.D. 410-328-5766  Department of Dermatology
Research: T-lymphocyte mediated allergic skin diseases, antigen presentation by resident epidermal cells such as Langerhans cells and keratinocytes to skin homing lymphocytes, and immunopharmacology
Patricia Gearhart, Ph.D. 410-558-8561 
Research: biochemical and functional interactions of these and other proteins that have been implicated in this error-prone repair pathway
Paula Geigle, PhD, PT 410-706-5210  Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science
Research: Aquatic Therapy
Geoffrey Girnun, Ph.D. 410-706-3331  Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Averell Gnatt, Ph.D.   Department of Pharmacology
Research: Eukaryotic transcription; mammalian transcription; cancer
Simeon Goldblum   Department of Medicine
Research: Endothelial cell biology; adherens junctions or zonula adherens; tyrosine phophorylation signaling events; endotoxin and Toll-like receptor signaling; protein tyrosine kinases and phosphatases
Da-Wei Gong, M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-1672  Department of Medicine
Research: role of chemokines that bind to CCR5 in protection from infection and disease progression.
Sharon Gordon, D.D.S, M.P.H., Ph.D 410-706-1656  Biomedical Sciences
Research: My research interest is injury and its clinical sequela-pain and wound healing-and the interaction of the inflammatory response and nervous system in pain.
Todd Gould, M.D. 410-706-5585  Department of Psychiatry
Research: My research uses molecular, cellular, and behavioral approaches to study the pharmacology of psychotropic medications and the underlying pathophysiology of mood disorders.
Joel D. Greenspan, Ph.D. 410-706-2027  Department of Biomedical Sciences
Research: Investigating the neural processes underlying human somesthetic perception, including pain
Anne Hamburger, Ph.D. 410-706-3908  Department of Pathology
Research: ErbR receptors in breast and prostate cancer
John Hamlyn, Ph.D. 410-706-3479  Department of Physiology
Research: In contemporary thinking, our research might be termed: OUABAINOMICS.
Bret Hassel, Ph.D. 410-328-2344  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: My laboratory studies two pathways of interferon action that are involved in the antiviral and tumor suppressive activities of interferon.
Russell Hill, Ph.D. 410 234 8883  Center of Marine Biotechnology
Research: Marine Microbiology and the Discovery of New Drugs
Gloria E. Hoffman, Ph.D. 410-706-2438  Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology
Research: The research in Dr. Hoffman's laboratory uses brain systems regulating endocrine and autonomic function as model systems for studying the processing of exictatory stimuli and consequent stimulus-trans
Henry H. Holcomb, M.D. 410-402-6817  Department of Psychiarty, MPRC
Research: The primary focus of my funded work concerns the question of perceptual learning in volunteers with schizophrenia.
Ramachandra S., Hosmane, Ph.D. 410-455-2520  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Biomedicinal chemistry with applications in antiviral and anticancer therapy and biomedical technology with applications in artificial blood.
Arif Hussain, M.D. 410-328-7225  Medicine
Research: (1) Pre-clinical studies in animal xenografts for prostate cancer; (2) Calcium regulation/calcium pumps; (3) Drug resistance
M. Samir Jafri, Ph.D. 410-706-2384  Neurology
Research: 1) Organotypic nigrostriatal cultures to study neurodegeneration and neuroprotection 2) Translational neurosurgical project using novel optical imaging to target stem cell and gene therapy delivery.
Rosemary Jagus, Ph.D. 410-234-8822  Center of Marine Biotechnology
Research: Molecular Biology of Translational Control
Anil Jaiswal, Ph.D. 410-706-2285  Pharmocology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Our research interests include 'Oxidative Stress Signaling, Cell Survival and Death, Chemoprevention, Oncogenesis and Bioreductive Drug Activation and Drug Development'.
Judith A. Johnson, Ph.D. 410-706-7253  Department of Pathology
Research: Pathogenesis of Vibrio Cholerae and closely related bacteria ultimately leading to vaccines
Laundette Jones, Ph.D. 410-706-7331  Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Research: Genetic and Environmental Modifiers of Breast Cancer risk; Environmental Toxicology; Mechanisms of Chemical Carcinogenesis
Susan I. V. Judge, Ph.D. 410-706-4481  Department of Neurology
Research: Biophysical and molecular studies of voltage-gated potassium (Kv) channels as potential therapeutic targets in neurodegenerative diseases (focus on multiple sclerosis).
Harry L. June, Ph.D. 410-706-4001  Psychiatry

Dhan Kalvakolanu 410-328-1396  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: The major research interests of Dr. Kalvakolanu's lab are regulation of gene transcription and signal transduction by cytokines; Tumor cell growth control; and Regulation of novel Cell death-activatin
Roberta Kamin-Lewis, Ph.D. 410-706-4886  Deparrment of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: human host defense mechanisms with emphasis on mucosal immunity (immunity in the major tracts-GI, genital-urinary, oral cavity, etc) and HIV-1 vaccine development.
Joseph Kao, Ph.D. (410) 706-4167  Medical Biotechnology Center and Department of Physiology
Research: Developing Molecular Probes for Physiology and Neuroscience Research; Calcium Regulation of Neuronal Excitability; In Vivo Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Imaging (EPRI)
James Kaper, Ph.D. 410-706-2344  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: Research in my laboratory focuses on the molecular pathogenesis of enteric bacterial pathogens.
Sergei Karnup, MD, PhD, DSc. 410-706-3563  Dept. Pharmacol. & Exper. Therapeutics
Research: My principal research interests are cell-to-cell interactions and integrating mechanisms in the brain microcircuits.
Richard L. Karpel, Ph.D. 410-455-2510  Departmentof Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Structure of gene 32 protein core domain bound to a single-stranded oligonucleotide Typical stopped-flow trace of gene 32 protein *I truncate binding poly(dT) Structure-function studies
Achsah Keegan, Ph.D. 410-706-8174  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: The major goal of our lab is to gain an understanding of the molecular mechanism by which IL-4 mediates its diverse array of biological effects with the future goal of developing rational strategies f
Asaf Keller, Ph.D. 410-706-7307  Department of Anatomy & Neurobiology
Research: Our laboratory's research focuses on information processing by local neuronal networks.
Lisa A. Kelly, Ph.D. 410-455-2507  Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, UMBC
Research: Photochemical probes of macromolecular structure; Stimuli-Responsive Polymers
Thorsten Kirsch, Ph.D. 410-706-2417  Orthopedics
Research: Growth plate and articular cartilage biology, Osteoarthritis; Cell differentiation; Physiological and pathological mineralization of skeletal and other tissues; Calcium and phosphate homeostasis
Steven Kittner, M.D. 410-328-6485  Neurology
Research: Stroke genetics
James I. Koenig, Ph.D. 410-402-7319  Department of Psychiatry
Research: The primary focus of my research is the neurobiology of stress.
Aikaterini Kontrogianni-Konstantopoulos, Ph.D. 410-706-5788  Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Research: My research focuses on the role of cytoskeletal proteins in muscle organization.
Robert Koos, Ph.D. 410-706-8033  Department of Physiology
Research: Molecular and Cellular Aspects of Angiogenesis and other Developmental Processes in the Ovary and Uterus
Bruce K. Krueger, Ph.D. 410-706-5065  Departments of Physiology and Psychiatry
Research: The principal research interests of this laboratory are the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie brain development and cognitive behavior.
H. Moo Kwon, Ph.D. 410-706-4382  Department of Physiology and Medicine
Research: Osmotic regulation of transcription in the kidney.
Joseph R. Lakowicz, Ph.D. 410-706-8409  Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Research: This laboratory is involved in the use and development of fluorescence spectroscopic methods.
W. Jonathan Lederer, M.D., Ph.D. 410-706-8181  and Department of Physiology
Research: Ca2+ signaling in living cells.
Myron M. Levine, M.D., D.T.P.H. 410-706-7588  Department of Medicine
Research: Overview Pathogenesis of bacterial diarrheas; enteric vaccine development; field epidemiologic studies of bacterial enteric infections. Research Interests Development of vaccines against enteric infec
George Lewis, Ph.D. 410-706-4688  Institute of Human Virology
Research: Development of Mucosal Vaccines Against HIV-1; The Role of Glycosaminoglycan Binding in the Biological Activities of b-chemokines
Erik P. Lillehoj, Ph.D. 410-706-3872  Department of Pediatrics
Research: Expression, structure, and function of MUC1 mucin by respiratory epithelial cells; Avian coccidiosis vaccines
Chen-Yong Lin, Ph.D. 410-706-  Biochemistry & Molecular
Research: Breast cancer treatment and prevention
Iris Lindberg, Ph.D. 410-706-4778  Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology
Research: Protein Structure-Function Efforts; The Cell Biology of the Convertase-binding Protein Interaction; Proteomics of Neuropeptide Production
David Litwack, Ph.D. 410-706-8824  Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology
Research: Neurogenesis, cell migration, and axon guidance during development of the pontine nuclei
Ferenc Livak, M.D. (410) 706-0747  Department of Microbiology and Immunology
Research: Our ultimate goal is to integrate the function of the lymphoid specific and ubiquitous external signals as well as the cell-autonomous transcriptional program into a coherent framework of lymphocyte d
Wuyuan Lu, Ph.D. 410-706-4890&n