Kevin B. Koronowski, PhD
Assistant Professor
Koronowski Lab Expertise:
Circadian Rhythms; Circadian Clock, Metabolism and Metabolic Disease, Molecular Biology, Genetic Mouse Models
Laboratory projects aim to better our understanding of how metabolism is regulated across time (over the course of a day) and space (between cells and organs of the body). Acquiring this knowledge will help identify root causes of, and potential therapies for, metabolic diseases such as obesity, metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes and cancer. We model metabolic health and disease in cultured cells and mice using environmental, dietary and genetic tools that disrupt the circadian clock, a biological system tied to metabolic health. We employ cutting-edge techniques in metabolomics, molecular biology and in vivo metabolism.
Related Diseases: Circadian Rhythm Disruption, Obesity, Type 2 diabetes, Metabolic syndrome
Techniques: Light- and food-based circadian entrainment, clock knockout and reconstitution mouse models, behavioral assays, cellular bioenergetics, live cell imaging and luciferase reporters, cell conditioned media and co-cultures, RNA sequencing and real-time quantitative PCR, chromatin-immunoprecipitation, LC-MS metabolomics, substrate tolerance tests, others
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Professional Background
Education
- 2017 - Ph.D. - Neuroscience - University of Miami
- 2012 - B.S. - Clinical Dietetics and Nutrition - University of Pittsburgh
Training
- 2017 - Postdoctoral Fellowship - P. Sassone-Corsi Laboratory - University of California Irvine
Appointments
- 2022 - Assistant Professor - University of Texas Health San Antonio
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- Research & Grants
- Publications