Innate immune determinants of tissue tolerance and inflammation

Friday, February 9, 2024 - 11:00am to 12:00pm

The Immunobiology Seminar Series presents:  "Innate Immune Determinants of Tissue Tolerance and Inflammation"

Presenter Details

Greg Sonnenberg, PhD
Associate Professor of Medicine, of Microbiolgy and Immunology in Medicine
Cornell University

The focus and long-term research goals of the Sonnenberg Laboratory are to interrogate the mechanisms that maintain a state of health in the human gastrointestinal tract.  While interactions between mammalian hosts and commensal bacteria are normally beneficial, it is becoming increasingly clear the dysregulated interactions can result in chronic inflammation.  Further, emerging studies in patient populations indicate that abnormal host immune responses to commensal bacteria are causally-linked to the pathogenesis and progression of numerous chronic infectious, inflammatory and metabolic diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), HIV/AIDS, viral hepatitis, cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes and cancer.  Ongoing research in the Sonnenberg Laboratory aims to (1) interrogate the pathways that regulate normally beneficial host interactions with commensal bacteria, (2) determine how these pathways become disrupted in chronic human diseases, and (3) identify novel therapeutic targets to prevent or limit dysregulated host-commensal bacteria relationships in human disease.  Read more

imb_seminar_flyer_sonnenberg.pdf

Event Location: 
Drachman Hall, Room B111
Event Contact Person: 
Polly Haffner
Event Contact Email: 
Event Contact Phone: 
520-626-0710
Event Address: 

1295 North Martin Ave

Event Contact Department: 
Immunobiology