EVANS MDS - Key Persons


Agarwal, Anupriya

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Alberti, Michael

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Bachireddy, Pavan

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Barriga, Francisco

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Beck, David B.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Bernard, Elsa

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Bick, Alexander G.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Boddu, Prajwal C.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Bowman, Teresa V.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Braun, Theodore P.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Bresnick, Emery H.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Brunner, Andrew M.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Cai, Sheng

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Calvi, Laura

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Camargo, Fernando D.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Cantor, Alan B.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Challen, Grant A.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Chlon, Timothy M.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Chung, Stephen S.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Colla, Simona

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Dalton, William B.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Duan, Zhijun

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Ebert, Benjamin L.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

EDWARD P. EVANS

Job Titles:
  • FUNDING MDS RESEARCH

Emery H. Bresnick

The Bresnick group conducts research on the development and function of blood cells that fight infection, protect cells and tissues by supplying oxygen and prevent lethal bleeding. These processes are studied in the contexts of physiology and the blood disease MDS. In MDS, the basic operating rules controlling the function of cells that produce blood cells, the stem and progenitor cells, become corrupted. Under the auspices of these corrupted rules, the cells malfunction, which causes deficiencies in the blood cells that are vital for life. To maximize the impact of our scientific and medical contributions and ensure that no barriers exist between our laboratory experimentation at the bench and the MDS patient in the clinic or the MDS-predisposed individual in the population, this proposal is a collaboration with physician-scientists that diagnose and treat MDS. Our outstanding physician-scientists reside at Dr. Bresnick's institution (Dr. Jane Churpek, UW-Madison) and other superb institutions (e.g., Dr. Lucy Godley, U. Chicago). Combined with a data science expert and long-term collaborator, Dr. Sunduz Keles, in aggregate, this highly interactive, multidisciplinary team provides opportunities for synergism that would not likely arise from individual efforts. This proposal relies on core expertise of Dr. Bresnick's group to understand how the human genome functions and how aberrations in the governing processes cause MDS. The application of clinical genetics to diagnose patients with blood cell deficiencies termed cytopenias regularly reveals changes in our genome - in single components of DNA termed nucleotides, or in some cases, greater changes involving multiple nucleotides. These changes alter the chemical composition or levels of specific proteins in the cell and reconfigure principles dictating cellular behavior, e.g. whether cells divide, replicate, produce distinct progeny or die. By virtue of human genetic diversity, individuals harbor "genetic variants" or DNA differences within genes. On the surface, it might appear that a variant at a gene known to regulate blood stem or progenitor cells would influence blood cell development and function. However, a given variant may have little to no impact, which represents a vexing problem. A major challenge is to discriminate among the variants that cause MDS, increase the probability of developing MDS or have no impact. Establishing whether a variant predisposes an individual to "triggers", originating from genetics or the environment that cause MDS, has high potential to advance early detection of defects that will cause MDS in the future and reveal prevention strategies. Early detection can justify moving forward with potentially curative bone marrow transplant before disease onset and progression. Strategies and systems for early detection will provide prevention opportunities to impede or reverse disease progression and develop therapeutic alternatives to bone marrow transplant.

Foltz, Jennifer A.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Fordyce, Polly

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Garcia-Manero, Guillermo

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Glimcher, Laurie H.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Godley, Lucy A.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Halene, Stephanie

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Hashimoto, Michihiro

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Heimlich, Jonathan B.

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles

Huang, Gang

Job Titles:
  • Researcher Profiles