Our program provides broad training in neuroscience and related basic
sciences and prepares students for career opportunities in academia, research,
or the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries. Faculty in this Section
have active research programs in the areas of neural development, synaptic
function and plasticity, cardiac reflexes, and mechanisms of neurodegeneration.
Graduate students will use experimental systems ranging from whole animals
and postmortem human tissue to brain slices, primary neuronal culture,
neural membranes and organelles, and isolated proteins.
Students can also participate in the Neuroscience
Graduate Program. This Program involves about 50 faculty members on
the Lawrence campus and University of Kansas Medical School in Kansas
City, a 40-minute drive from Lawrence.

Interactions between neurons and their environment.
Dr. Brian Ackley
Differentiation of neurons and muscle cells
Dr.
Vicoria Corbin
Role of tau in Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative disorders
Dr.
Chris Gamblin
Unraveling cytokine signaling complexity using computational and experimental protein design techniques
Dr. John Karanicolas
Synaptic transmission in the hippocampus
Dr.
Paul Kelly
Developmental morphogenesis of the nervous system and other organs
Dr. Erik Lundquist
Thromboxane-mediated neural reflexes in the heart and lung
Dr. Jim Orr
Learning and memory in mammals
Dr. Joseph Steinmetz
The cytoskeleton in cell division, development and neuromuscular function
Dr. Kathy Suprenant
