Faculty
Kenneth L. Rock, MD, PhD Our laboratory investigates the mechanisms which control the display of foreign antigens to the immune system and moregenerally the process of immune surveillance. In these processes the immune system uses MHC class I molecules to display on the cell surface oligopeptides derived from a cell's expressed genes. This allows cytotoxic T lymphocytes of the immune system to detect and eliminate cells expressing "foreign" sequences (e.g. from a viral infection or mutation). In many cases two distinct antigen presentation pathways are involved in the initial generation of the immune response and in the subsequent identification of the actual tumor or virally infected cell; these two pathways are termed cross presentation and direct presentation. |
|
Milena Bogunovic, PhD Super cool science goes here... |
|
Kiera Clayton, PhD Super cool science goes here... |
|
Eric Huseby, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Joonsoo Kang, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Andrea Reboldi, PhD Assistant Professor Super cool science goes here... |
|
Liisa K. Selin, MD, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Lawrence J. Stern, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Susan Swain, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Page |
|
Gowthaman Uthaman, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Raymond M. Welsh, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Mauricio Calvo-Calle, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Michela Frascoli, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Anna Gil, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|
Brian Stadinski, PhD Super cool science goes here... Faculty Profile |
|