Faculty Detail
Name
MYTHREYE KARTHIKEYAN
Associate Professor
Campus Address
WTI 320B Zip 3300
Phone
(205) 934-2746
E-mail
mythreye@uab.edu
Other websites
https://sites.uab.edu/mythreyelab/
Education
Undergraduate
Delhi University ( 3 year degree)
1996
BSc Honors
Graduate
University North Carolina Chapel Hill
20005
PhD
Faculty Appointment(s)
Appointment Type
Department
Division
Rank
Primary
Joint Pathology
Molecular & Cellular Pathology
Associate Professor
Center
Center for Women's Reproductive Health
Center for Women's Reproductive Health
Associate Professor
Center
Comprehensive Cancer Center
Comprehensive Cancer Center
Associate Professor
Center
Ctr for Clinical & Translational Sci
Ctr for Clinical & Translational Sci
Associate Professor
Graduate Biomedical Sciences Affiliations
Cancer Biology
Cell, Molecular, & Developmental Biology
Biographical Sketch
Mythreye Karthikeyan received her doctoral training and degree from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill in 2005 ( Advisor: Kerry S Bloom). She initiated her postdoctoral training with Pascal Goldschmidt at Duke University before extending and completing her training with Gerard C Blobe at Duke University. She was appointed as Research Assistant Professor also at Duke between the period of 2009-2013, before accepting her first tenure track position at University of South Carolina in the fall of 2013. There, she was tenured and promoted to the rank of Associate Professor in 2019. She joined UAB's Department of Pathology in Oct 2019 and is currently a tenured Associate Professor here.
Society Memberships
Organization Name
Position Held
Org Link
AACR
member
ASBMB
member
Research/Clinical Interest
Title
Molecular and cellular mechanisms of signaling during metastasis
Description
The goal is to develop an in depth understanding of mechanisms and consequences of altered signaling in disease. Emphasis is on cellular and molecular mechanisms of tumor progression and metastasis. Our approach is cross-disciplinary interfacing with biochemistry, molecular cell biology and systems approaches . Our overall mission is to discover innovative avenues for developing therapeutics. Work is supported by two R01 grants from the National Institutes of Health.
Keywords
ovarian cancer, TGFbeta, BMP, inhibin/activin, betaglycan, cellular signaling, extracellular matrix , cell survival mechanisms