Dr. Tyrrell selected for UAB GBS Mentorship award
Lab Outing with the Samal Lab
We had a blast challenging the Samal lab to paintball!
Ali presents his poster at McKnight Brain Research Foundation annual meeting in Gainsville, FL
Ali presents at GBS Orientation
Farewell to Ja’Niyah!
Our summer student, Ja’Niyah is leaving us to go back to Savannah State University to finish her undergraduate studies. She did some awesome work optimizing our antibody staining for neuroinflammatory markers in a mouse model of dementia!
Learning about Illumina short-read sequencing
Md Akkas Ali, a GBS PhD student in the Tyrrell Lab, provided an in-depth overview of Illumina next-generation-sequencing during our lab meeting
Welcome Ali!
Ali is a PhD student in the Graduate Biomedical Sciences (GBS) at that University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is also an Assistant Professor in the Department of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology at Shahjalal University of Science and Technology (SUST) in Sylhet, Bangladesh, a position he as held since 2018. He has a Bachelor of Science (BSc) and Master of Science (MS) degrees in Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology from SUST in 2011 and 2013, respectively. His primary academic and research interests are focused on Cancer Immunology and Neuro-Oncology, specifically in relation to Glioblastoma. Ali has an interest specifically in T lymphocytes and has picked up flow cytometry very quickly since he has been in the lab:
We are excited to welcome Ali to the lab! We may never match him for his ability to eat spicy food. We’re looking forward to all of the great science to come! Welcome to the lab Ali!
Lab Lunch!
Harry, Chase, Trey, Ali, and Dan went out for a monthly lab lunch at Yummefy in Birmingham, AL. Trey and Ali braved the “Indian Spicy” curry while everyone else went for less spicy options.
Tyrrell Lab Receives Nathan Shock Center Pilot
The proposal is: Determining cytotoxic T cell phenotype and function in the aging brain
Here’s a brief description of the project:
We know that a person’s age is the strongest clinical risk factor for most chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease and neurodegenerative disease (like Alzheimer’s disease). Obviously, we can’t change a person’s age, but we may be able to modify the biological changes that occur as we age. We know that T lymphocytes, the white blood cells of the adaptive immune system, change significantly as we age. We also know that T lymphocytes migrate into the brain during aging where we believe they contribute to damaging brain tissues and structures. We have found a population of T lymphocytes in the brain that we don’t know much about, so the question we’re trying to answer with this pilot award is simple. Very simply, we want to know why these cells move into the brain and what they are doing once they get there. If they are promoting disease, then we can try to target or remove them as a therapeutic approach.