User:Demetrius Gravis: Difference between revisions

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I have worked with a number of Beloit College students on biomedical laboratory research projects investigating the role of transcription factors in signal transduction and gene expression pathways that regulate cellular processes such as:
I have worked with a number of Beloit College students on biomedical laboratory research projects investigating the role of transcription factors in signal transduction and gene expression pathways that regulate cellular processes such as:
 
*Cancer
•Cancer
*Innate and adaptive immune system activation
•Innate and adaptive immune system activation
*Free radicals, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and oxidative cell damage
•Free radicals, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and oxidative cell damage
*Interactions between microbes and the host immune response
•Interactions between microbes and the host immune response


==Current Research Projects==
==Current Research Projects==

Revision as of 08:13, 23 March 2011

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Contact Info

Demetrius Gravis (an artistic interpretation)

Demetrius Gravis
Assistant Professor of Biology
Beloit College
Beloit, WI

Education

  • Year, PhD, Institute
  • Year, BS, Institute

Research interests

At Beloit College I teach courses in molecular biology, cell biology, immunology and microbiology and conduct research in these areas as well. My primary research interests focus on the molecular mechanisms of cell signaling (signal transduction) and gene expression in leukocytes, the cells of the immune system. I use the tools of molecular biology, cell biology, biochemistry, and pharmacology to examine how leukocytes are activated to respond to infection and how extracellular and intracellular signals regulate cell growth and cell death.

I have worked with a number of Beloit College students on biomedical laboratory research projects investigating the role of transcription factors in signal transduction and gene expression pathways that regulate cellular processes such as:

  • Cancer
  • Innate and adaptive immune system activation
  • Free radicals, reactive oxygen species (ROS), and oxidative cell damage
  • Interactions between microbes and the host immune response

Current Research Projects

Useful links