Back to Main

Faculty Detail    
Name MARTIN E YOUNG
 
Campus Address ZRB 308 Zip 0007
Phone
E-mail  martinyoung@uabmc.edu
Other websites
     

Education
Graduate  University of Oxford, U.K.     1995  M. Biochemistry 
Graduate  University of Oxford, U.K.     1998  D.Phil Biochemistry 
Graduate  Boston University    1999  Postdoctoral Diabetes/Metabolism 
Graduate  University of Texas at Houston    2001  Postdoctoral Diabetes/Metabolism 


Faculty Appointment(s)
Appointment Type Department Division Rank
Primary  Med - Cardiovascular Disease  Med - Cardiovascular Disease Professor
Secondary  Biomedical Engineering  Biomedical Engineering Professor
Secondary  Cell, Developmntl, & Integrative Biology  Cell, Developmntl, & Integrative Biology Professor
Center  Comprehensive Cardiovascular Ctr  Comprehensive Cardiovascular Ctr Professor
Center  Comprehensive Diabetes Center  Comprehensive Diabetes Center Professor
Center  Med - Cardiovascular Disease  Ctr Cardiovasc Bio (Org Ret) Professor
Center  Ctr for Exercise Medicine (Org Ret)  Ctr for Exercise Medicine (Org Ret) Professor
Center  Nutrition Sciences Research  Nutrition Obesity Res Ctr (NORC) Professor

Graduate Biomedical Sciences Affiliations
Biochemistry and Structural Biology 

Biographical Sketch 
I have a long-standing dedication towards teaching and mentorship. From my graduate years through now, I have continuously taught intermediary metabolism through lectures to both graduate and medical students. In the latter case, I have been recipient of a Best Lecturer award three years in a row at UAB. In addition to classroom-based teaching, I have an established track record of mentoring undergraduates, graduates and postdoctoral fellows, and currently serve as a primary faculty member on at least four T32s. During my doctoral studies, as well as initial postdoctoral training, I investigated novel mechanisms contributing to skeletal muscle insulin resistance, an underlying feature of type 2 diabetes. I naturally transitioned my research more towards cardiometabolic disease complications, assessing the mechanisms by which common environmental factors (e.g., diet) and metabolic disease states (e.g., diabetes, obesity) adversely influence cardiac contractility and therefore contribute to the pathogenesis of heart failure. Currently, my research is dedicated to understanding the interrelationship between cardiac metabolism and contractility, and the mechanisms by which imbalances between substrate availability and utilization impair cardiac form and function. This expertise is illustrated through both publication and funding histories. I have published over 130 peer reviewed manuscripts in top tear journals, such as Circulation Research and Journal of Biological Chemistry, and have been commissioned by numerous journals (including Nature Reviews Endocrinology) for the completion of multiple invited review articles. Currently, I am co-chairing a coordinated effort to generate an AHA Statement focused on ‘Assessing Cardiac Metabolism’, which will ultimately be published in Circulation Research.

Society Memberships
Organization Name Position Held Org Link
American Association of Medical Chronobiology & Chronotherapy (AAMCC)  Member   
American Heart Association  Member