Alice Kane, PhD, Institute for Systems Biology (ISB), United States
Dr. Alice Kane started as the Institute for Systems Biology (ISB)’s Ling/Obrzut Assistant Professor in the Fall of 2022. Dr. Kane completed her PhD at the University of Sydney in 2016. She began her postdoctoral training in the lab of Susan Howlett at Dalhousie University, before joining the lab of David Sinclair at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Kane’s current research program at ISB aims to investigate the biological determinants of frailty in both sexes, using an integrated approach across physiological, molecular and computational techniques.
Sarah Mitchell, PhD, Princeton University, United States
I am a biogerontologist with training in physiology, pharmacology, and nutritional interventions for healthy aging. I am currently a Staff Scientist in the Ludwig Cancer Princeton Branch working to understand how dietary manipulations can improve treatment efficacy in cancer, a major age-related disease. My current research focuses on implementation of metabolomics methods to develop mechanistic understanding into the aging process.
Marianna Sadagurski, PhD, Wayne State University, United States
Dr. Marianna Sadagurski is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Wayne State University and a faculty member of the Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics. Her research focuses on the neural and molecular regulation of aging and metabolism, with particular emphasis on sex-specific mechanisms of brain aging, hypothalamic neuroinflammation, and how environmental exposures during development program lifelong metabolic and cognitive trajectories. Her laboratory uses multidisciplinary approaches combining molecular biology, genetics, and metabolic analysis to investigate sex differences in brain–body communication during aging and their implications for translational medicine.
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