Lab Members
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Sumeda Nandadasa , PhD
Assistant ProfessorPrinicpal Investigator
Education:
- PhD in Molecular and Developmental Biology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Research Foundation.
- Postdoctoral training: Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Insititute.
- Undergraduate Degree: B.A. in Biotechnology and Biochemistry, Minnesota State University
I am a developmental biologist by training. Having been exposed to developmental biology starting with the sophomore year as an undergraduate, through working with Dr. Ellen Brisch (MSUM), and then working with two extraordinary developmental biologists Dr. Chris Wylie and Dr. Janet Heasman (CCHMC) for my PhD thesis, I was inspired to embark on a career as a developmental biologist my self. The very first time I saw a sea urchin egg divide and develop into an embryo under a light microscope, I knew this is what I will be studying for the rest of my life – the amazing process of how a ball of cells self organizes to become a fetus with structure, form, organs and a skeleton..., the program of embryonic development.
e-mail: Sumeda.Nandadasa@Umassmed.edu
Phone: (508) 856-3962
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Karyn Robert , B.A., M.A.
Lab Manager and Research Associate IIIKaryn is the Nandadasa lab manager. She joined our group after completing her master’s and bachelor’s degrees in Biology from Clark University, Worcester, MA and with decades of experience working as a veterinary technician. Karyn oversees a number of very exciting projects including synthesis of mRNA in development of Lipid Nanoparticles (LNPs) to treat cystic kidney disease and the lab's entire transgenic mouse colony.
e-mail: Karyn.Robert1@Umassmed.edu
Phone: (508) 856-1620
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Manu Ahmed , Ph.D.
Postdoctoral FellowManu obtained his degree from the University of Liverpool in Biological and Medical science with a focus in molecular biology and genetics. He went on to complete his PhD at Oxford Brookes University where he studied flagellar substructures and flagellum assembly mechanisms in the single celled protist Trypanosoma brucei. He subsequently became interested in mammalian cilia and mechanisms of ciliopathy diseases which is the focus of his work in our lab.
Manu is also a lifelong pianist and enjoys playing soccer, cycling and hiking in his spare time.
e-mail: Manu.Ahmed@Umassmed.edu
Phone: (508) 856-1620
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Yarimel Rosado , B.A.
Graduate StudentYarimel is a Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences graduate student pursuing a Neuroscience PhD. She joins our lab after completing a Neuroscience PREP in Michigan State University and completing her double bachelor in Biology and Biomedical Sciences in The Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico. Yarimel studies the molecular mechanism of motile cilia formation in the ependymal cells lyning the brain ventricles utilizing ciliopathy mouse models.
Yarimel enjoys baking, cooking and playing the flute in her spare time and is the lab social secretary.
e-mail: Yarimel.Rosado@Umassmed.edu
Phone: (508) 856-1620
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Sydney Fischer , B.A.
Graduate StudentSydney is a Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences graduate student pursuing a Neuroscience Ph. D. She received her B.A. in Neuroscience from Washington & Jefferson College in Pennsylvania. Sydney studies metalloprotease regulation of the extracellular matrix components in the perineuronal net and neuronal plasticity in addition to protein trafficking during primary cilia formation.
Sydney enjoys traveling, camping, and sketching in her spare time.
e-mail: Sydney.Fischer@Umassmed.edu
Phone: (508) 856-1620