Our laboratory is recruiting a postdoctoral fellow to investigate how senescent cells shape tissue function in vivo, particularly its interplay with cellular plasticity/reprogramming, immune–stromal interactions, and tissue remodeling, including in physiological contexts such as female reproductive biology and aging.
Our lab addresses a central question in biology: what is the physiological function of cellular senescence, and how does it transition from a regenerative program to a driver of pathology? We investigate how senescent cells control tissue plasticity and microenvironmental dynamics during regeneration, aging, and cancer, and how these processes can be modulated. Our research is primarily conducted in vivo. We combine genetic mouse models (lineage tracing, conditional perturbations), pharmacological interventions (senolytics and senomorphics), and organoid systems with functional assays, flow cytometry, advanced imaging, and high-dimensional approaches, including single-cell and spatial transcriptomics and epigenomics.
We are seeking highly motivated candidates with: