Noticias departamentales

Award for Julia Aguirre-Ghiso, PhD

Dr. Julio Aguirre-Ghiso, Rose C. Falkenstein Chair in Cancer Research and Professor of Cell Biology and Oncology is recognized by an award from the University of Colorado Comprehensive Cancer Center. During a recent visit to the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus to Deliver a Cancer Center Symposium Series Seminar on "Mechanisms of Cancer Dormancy and Reactivation" Dr. Aguirre-Ghiso was awarded a “Cancer Warrior Award” in recognition for “his outstanding contributions and achievements in cancer research and for his devotion to training future cancer warriors”. The Award was delivered by Dr. James DeGregori who is Deputy Director of the University of Colorado Cancer Center and Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics (faculty since 1997) and holds the Courtenay and Lucy Patten Davis Endowed Chair in Lung Cancer Research.


Pamela Stanley: Essentials of Glycobiology

Pamela Stanley is an editor and senior author of 8 chapters in the textbook “Essentials of Glycobiology” published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press in 2022, now in its 4th edition. The group of editors and authors of all 4 editions of EoG received the Distinguished Service Award from the Society of Glycobiology at its annual meeting on Amelia Island, Florida in November 2024. The award is for service to the scientific community in general, and in particular to the community of glycobiologists, for providing a comprehensive textbook which is freely available online at NCBI books upon publication https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK579918/ All proceeds from sales of the print version of the textbook go to a non-profit established by the group of editors to support the publication of next editions of the book. Pamela Stanley was recently elected President of the Consortium of Glycobiology Editors (CGE).


Satish Nandakumar: Pilot Award

Satish Nandakumar, Profesor Adjunto de Biología Celular, recibió recientemente una beca piloto de 100.000 dólares de la Fundación Henry y Marilyn Taub para sus estudios sobre el papel de la presentación de antígenos en la expansión clonal de células madre hematopoyéticas en síndromes mielodisplásicos (SMD). Este estudio explorará un mecanismo novedoso basado en indicios de estudios genéticos humanos sobre la hematopoyesis clonal, un estado precursor que a menudo precede al SMD. El Dr. Gregoire Lauvau, Profesor de Microbiología e Inmunología, es coinvestigador de este proyecto.


Dr. LaFave receives two lung cancer foundation grants from the A Breath of Hope Foundation and the Lung Cancer Research Foundation

Dr. LaFave has been awarded two foundation grants and a special award to support lung cancer research projects in her lab. In the A Breath of Hope Peg’s Fight for Life grant, Dr. LaFave and her team will investigate differences in immunotherapy responses in KRAS and EGFR mutant lung tumors using genetically engineered mouse models and patient samples. This study will determine why EGFR mutant lung tumors are less responsive to immunotherapy than KRAS mutant tumors. Dr. LaFave received a second foundation grant from the Lung Cancer Research Foundation (LCRF) to investigate how chromatin state impacts immunity in lung tumors that arise in individuals with and without a smoking history. This research aims to identify the key chromatin regulators that impact immunity in smokers and never smokers and will provide insight to improve treatment approaches for lung cancer. For her LCRF proposal, Dr. LaFave was also awarded the prestigious William C. Rippe award for Distinguished Research in Lung Cancer. This award is given to the investigator “whose proposal not only demonstrated exceptional scientific merit but also exemplified an enduring commitment to making an impact in the field of lung cancer research”.


Dr. Satish Nandakumar receives a prestigious research grant from the Edward P. Evans Foundation

El Dr. Nandakumar ha recibido la prestigiosa beca de investigación de la Fundación Edward P. Evans para apoyar su investigación sobre la predisposición de la línea germinal a la hematopoyesis clonal (HC) y su progresión a síndromes mielodisplásicos (SMD). Durante los próximos tres años, su equipo utilizará tecnologías de edición genómica múltiple en células madre hematopoyéticas humanas para probar cientos de combinaciones de mutaciones somáticas de la línea germinal e identificar interacciones genéticas críticas que subyacen a la formación de clones de células madre premalignas. Los estudios examinarán cómo estos clones premalignas se transforman en células madre cancerosas de SMD que dejan de producir glóbulos rojos, lo que es un problema grave para los pacientes de SMD. El conocimiento obtenido de esta investigación podría permitir el desarrollo de nuevos tratamientos dirigidos a los clones de HC y prevenir el desarrollo de SMD.


Dr. Maria Marianovich receives her first NIH R01

La Dra. Marianovich, profesora adjunta del Departamento de Biología Celular, recibió una subvención R01 de tres millones de dólares por cinco años del Instituto Nacional del Corazón, la Sangre y los Pulmones (NHLBI) de los National Institutes of Health (NIH) para estudiar los efectos del envejecimiento en la hematopoyesis. Mediante nuevos modelos genéticos y sofisticadas metodologías de obtención de imágenes de la médula ósea, la Dra. Marianovich y su equipo investigarán cómo el sistema nervioso autónomo controla los componentes del nicho de células madre hematopoyéticas en la médula ósea para regular el envejecimiento del sistema sanguíneo. El objetivo general de este estudio es identificar nuevos mecanismos del envejecimiento hematopoyético que puedan utilizarse para el desarrollo de terapias de rejuvenecimiento.


Seven new graduate students joined the Department of Cell Biology

The warmest welcome to the 7 new Ph.D. students who recently declared a thesis lab in our department. We are glad you are here, and we look forward to learning about your research, talent, and ambitions at CB Journal Clubs and WIPs. This highly dynamic and interactive community has so much to offer to our trainees, we are confident that you will soon find Cell Biology a truly exciting place to pursue your graduate studies. Congratulations to our new students and their mentors!

Alison Chafitz
Mentor: Rebeca San Martin

Justin Ferraro
Mentor: Lindsay LaFave

Karthik Ledalla
Mentor: Kristy Stengel

Shane Mitchell
Mentor: Kira Gritsman

Victor Morell
Mentor: Kristy Stengel

Lucia Petriz Otano
Mentor: Julio Aguirre-Ghiso

Akiva Rube
Mentor: Lindsay LaFave


Eight Cell Biology Students Successfully Completed their Qual

For Ph.D. students, completing the Qualifying Exam marks an important milestone in their graduate training as this signals the advancement to candidacy for the doctoral degree. To all of our students who worked hard and achieved this significant goal this spring: You did it! Congratulations!

Farzana Begum
Mentors: Maria Marianovich & Ulrich Steidl

Amber Buhagiar
Mentor: Ulrich Steidl

Lionel Colon
Mentor: Julio Aguirre-Ghiso

Eric Liu
Mentor: Hilda Ye

Sara Mosavarpour
Mentors: Roger Chang & Lindsay LaFave

Brendan Mullaley
Mentor: Lindsay LaFave

Ariel Raskin
Mentor: Kristy Stengel

Luis Valencia Salazar
Mentor: Julio Aguirre-Ghiso


Dr. Kristy Stengel receives her first NIH R01

RUNX1 is a critical regulator of gene expression programs driving hematopoietic development. Consistently, germline loss-of-function RUNX1 mutations in people are associated with a familial platelet disorder that predisposes individuals to the development of myeloid malignancy (RUNX1-FPDMM). Therefore, detailed mechanisms of RUNX1-mediated gene regulation will greatly improve our understanding of both blood development and hematopathology. Kristy Stengel, Assistant Professor of Cell Biology, was recently awarded a 4-year R01 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to use novel strategies of rapid RUNX1 protein degradation to define the kinetic features of RUNX1 activity throughout hematopoietic development. These studies will lead to a better understanding of how RUNX1 alters gene expression networks to drive cell fate decisions.


Congratulations to Dr. Sriram Sundaravel, and his mentor Dr. Ulrich Steidl, on receipt of the Special Fellow award from the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS)

Sriram Sundaravel, a postdoctoral fellow in the Steidl lab has been honored with the Special Fellow award from the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS). The LLS is the largest nonprofit funder of cutting-edge blood cancer research. The Special Fellow award is a mechanism which supports postdocs and instructors who have clearly demonstrated success in their current postdoctoral/instructor position and who will be competitive for an independent position. This award will support Sriram’s research into developing innovative approaches to study leukemia stem cell heterogeneity. More information about this award can be found here.


Congratulations to Eric Liu, and his mentor Hilda Ye, on receipt of a Best Poster Award at the 2024 HTLV conference!

PhD candidate Eric Liu received a Best Poster Award at the 21st Biennial International Conference on Human Retrovirology: HTLV and related viruses, which just concluded in London (June 2nd-5th, 2024). This is the first ever conference award given by the International Retrovirology Association (IRVA) to a study conducted at Einstein-Montefiore. Eric’s poster is entitled “North American adult T-Cell leukemia/lymphoma has frequent mutations in CCR4 and responds in vitro to a small molecule CCR4 antagonist”. In this study, the research team discovered that nearly half of the NA-ATLL cohort studied carried CCR4 mutations. CCL22 but not CCL17 induced strong chemotaxis in NA-ATLL, which can be potently inhibited by a small molecule CCR4 antagonist, suggesting a novel therapeutic opportunity for this devastating cancer.


Zijie Sun Joins Cell Biology

We are excited to welcome to the Cell Biology department the entire Sun lab! Dr. Zijie (ZJ) Sun is an internationally renowned prostate cancer investigator. He came to us from City of Hope National Medical Center, where he was a Professor in the Department of Cancer Biology and Molecular Medicine. Prior to joining City of Hope, Dr. Sun had been a faculty member for 18 years at Stanford University. Dr. Sun’s research program focuses on the molecular mechanisms underlying transcriptional control and cell signaling in development and tumorigenesis. Most recent studies from his lab demonstrate the roles of new stromal niches in prostate development and tumorigenesis. Ongoing projects in his lab are uncovering genomic and epigenetic alterations in controlling development, aging, and tumorigenesis. Dr. Sun joins us as a Professor in the Departments of Oncology and of Cell Biology, and the Director of Prostate Cancer Program at Montefiore Einstein Comprehensive Cancer Center. His laboratory is currently at Ullmann 211 but will soon move to their permanent home at Ullman 511.


Brandon Kim Selected In Regeneron Science Talent Search

Congratulations to Brandon Kim for being selected by the Society for Science as a top 300 Scholar in the 83rd Regeneron Science Talent Search - the nation’s oldest and most prestigious science and mathematics competition for high school seniors. Brandon attends Great Neck South High School and is being mentored by his high school teacher Nicole Spinelli and Cell Biology faculty Lindsay LaFave. His project was selected from a pool of over 2000 applications across the country, underscoring his significant research achievements as a promising, young scientist. Congratulations, Brandon!


Congratulations to Michael Papanicolaou, PhD, and his mentor Julio A. Aguirre Ghiso, on receipt of a Cancer Research Institute Irvington Postdoctoral Fellowship. 

This prestigious fellowship provides funding to qualified post-doctoral fellows at leading universities around the world who pursue research in fundamental immunology or cancer immunology. In this awarded project, co-mentored by Ross Levine (Sloan Kettering) and XingXing Zhang (Einstein), Michael will investigate how age-related clonal hematopoiesis influences breast cancer dormancy and metastasis. Congratulations, Michael!


Dr. Wenjun Guo and Dr. Keisule Ito promoted to full professionship with tenure

El Dr. Guo obtuvo su Licenciatura en Ciencias en la Universidad de Nankai y luego un PhD en la Facultad de Medicina Weill Cornell/Instituto Sloan-Kettering de Nueva York. En 2005, se unió al laboratorio del Dr. Robert A. Weinberg en el Instituto Whitehead para su capacitación postdoctoral. En 2011, el Dr. Guo fue contratado por el entonces recién creado Instituto Ruth L. y David S. Gottesman para la Investigación de Células Madre y Medicina Regenerativa y se unió a la facultad de Biología Celular como Profesor Asistente. Sus intereses de investigación son la plasticidad celular en la progresión del cáncer y la metástasis.

After earning both his M.D. and Ph.D. degrees from Keio University, Japan, Dr. Ito came to the United States in 2006 for his postdoctoral training at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. In 2012, Dr. Ito was recruited to Einstein from Harvard Medical School, where he was an Instructor in Medicine, to join Cell Biology and the newly established Ruth L. and David S. Gottesman Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Research as an Assistant Professor. Dr. Ito’s research program focuses on hematopoietic homeostasis, covering a variety of topics ranging from stem cell fate decisions to myelodysplastic syndrome, leukemia, and sickle cell disease pathogenesis.

Una vez más, nuestras más cálidas felicitaciones a los doctores Guo e Ito. Apreciamos sinceramente su arduo trabajo y dedicación al departamento y a la comunidad de Einstein.