About Us

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The Schindler Iterative Translation Lab is located at the VA Puget Sound Medical Center in Seattle. We are a part of the VA Northwest Network GRECC (Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Care) and MIRECC (Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center), and the University of Washington Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Department and Graduate Program in Neuroscience. 

Please take a moment to look at our Lab Principles for resources that members of the lab have selected to best represent our lab culture, goals, and beliefs, and view our Lab Compact (work in progress). Our lab does not tolerate harassment or discrimination of any kind. We believe white supremacy culture exists and is insidious and we work to continuously learn and grow as humans first and scientists second. Black Lives Matter. Ableism is unacceptable. 


Abigail G. Schindler, Ph.D.

Abbie eating Doner (visiting family in Germnay) Abbie at an amusement park

Research Biologist, VA Puget Sound Health Care System
Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, Division of Gerontology
Affiliate, eScience Institute
Member, Center of Excellence in Neurobiology of Addiction, Pain, and Emotion (NAPE)
Member, Center for Microbiome Sciences and Therapeutics (CMiST) 

 

Lover of cheese, hedgehogs, and punk rock, Abbie is our courageous and compassionate leader. Her lived experience of trauma and substance use disorder drives her passion for personalized medicine and prevention/early-intervention. She supports safe consumption sites and drug legalization and knows enough Python to be dangerous. She strives to empower all members of the lab and thinks team science and open source are the way of the future.

Google Scholar   Github   Twitter


Current members:

Renata Daniels, MS, BA

Renata is a technician in the SIT lab who received her master’s degree from Colorado State University, studying neuroendocrine control of stress responses with Dr. Bob Handa. She is passionate about contributing to the understanding and treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders, and is particularly interested in the interactions of stress and neuroimmune function. Microglia are her favorite cell type. Outside of lab, Renata enjoys playing guitar, sewing, gardening, backpacking, cooking, dungeons and dragons, and watching horror movies. She loves trying new things, which keeps her list of interests ever-growing.

Alyssa Easton, BS

 

Alyssa is a 3rd year in the Molecular Engineering PhD program using data science to study the molecular mechanisms underlying the gut-brain axis and how this system is impacted by stress, trauma, and aging. She is co-advised by Dr. Sean Gibbons at the Institute for Systems Biology. As an undergraduate, Alyssa did aging research in the lab of Dr. Hana Hall as well as computational biophysics at LBNL’s Advanced Light Source with Dr. Susan Tsutakawa. Originally from Indiana, she holds a B.S. in Biological Engineering with a concentration in Cellular and Biomolecular Engineering from Purdue University. Offline, Alyssa loves to sing, learn guitar, make lattes, and explore the incredible PNW!

Alyssa’s Google Scholar     Alyssa’s LinkedIn

Makenzie Patarino, BS

Makenzie at the end of a hike with arms up in celebration Makenzie head shot

Makenzie is a 4th year in the UW Neuroscience PhD program studying the heterogeneity in responses to trauma, substance use, and aging. Makenzie earned her BS in Neuroscience from MIT where she was also a pole vaulter on the track and field team. As an undergrad she conducted research in the Tye Lab, and then continued her work with them as a lab technician at the Salk Institute in San Diego prior to starting graduate school at UW. When she’s not in lab, Makenzie enjoys hiking and camping, adding to her tea collection, going to concerts, and searching for the best lavender ice cream in Seattle.

Makenzie’s Google Scholar   Makenzie’s Twitter

Jenna Sanders, BA

Jenna is a post-baccalaureate who joined the lab after graduating from Seattle Pacific University with a BA in psychology and a minor in sociology. She is part of the University of Washington’s Substantial Opportunities in Addiction Research (UW-SOAR) Doctoral Readiness Program, a 2-year research fellowship. In undergrad, Jenna was a member of the Kang Cultural Development Lab and studied positive White racial identity in college-aged students. Her research interests are mostly in pharmacology, neuroanatomy, and psychiatric disorders, but has a growing passion for studying substance use and trauma. Jenna loves playing instruments, singing in the car, watching movies with friends, and spending quality time in her childhood home, the Olympic National Park.

Bryan Schuessler, PhD

Bryan is a staff scientist who graduated from the University of Washington in June of 2022 with a doctorates in Psychology (emphasis in behavioral neuroscience), where he studied the neurobehavioral substrates of fear, anxiety and risky decision-making in rodents using ethologically-relevant paradigms in the laboratory of Dr. Jeansok Kim. As an undergraduate, Bryan studied the ontogeny of substance use in rats. Bryan has a deep interest in comprehensively studying naturalistic rodent behavior to better model human non-pathological and pathological behaviors. Outside of the lab, Bryan enjoys listening to and making unlistenable music, the occasional video game, watching bad movies and attempting to cook.

Monica Tschang, BA

Monica is a 3rd year PhD Candidate in the Neuroscience program studying the relationship between the gut microbiome and psychiatric disorders following trauma. Before coming to UW, Monica was a certified east coaster. Raised in New Jersey, she stayed to earn her BA in Cell Biology and Neuroscience at Rutgers, where she found her passion for science communication and mental health education/outreach. When she’s not in the lab, you can find Monica coaching figure skaters at Northgate, exploring nature trails near the city, or awkwardly trying to make friends with the cats at Twice Sold Tales. 

Monica’s LinkedIn   Monica’s Personal Website   Monica’s Google Scholar

Ronin Deo-Campo Vuong

Ronin is a third-year undergrad student at UW and a double major in neuroscience and biochemistry. He is especially interested the connections between the nervous system and other organ systems such as the gut-brain axis, cellular neuroscience and its associated mechanisms. He plans to pursue these topics more, either in graduate or medical school (but hasn’t fully decided). Outside of things science and research, Ronin enjoys running, reading, and wandering around the Seattle area with friends for markets, food, or activities.


Close collaborators:

William Banks, MD, MPH  

Molly Braun, PhD

Michael Bruchas, PhD

David Cook, PhD

Erik Carlson, MD, PhD

Sam Golden, PhD

Rebecca Hendrickson, MD, PhD

Jeffrey Iliff, PhD

Samantha Keil, PhD

Kathleen Pagulayan, PhD

Elaine Peskind, MD

Garth Terry, MD, PhD

Tami Wolden-Hansen, Ph.D. 

Larry Zweifel, PhD


Previous members:

Saiyara Alam, BS

Britahny Baskin, PhD

Omkar Borikar, BS

Brett Collins, MD

Erin Cooper, MSW

Harmanjit Dhillon, BS

Baylee Eilers, BS

Kathryn Gao, BS

Melanie Herbert, BS

Sarah Holden, BS

Janet Lee, BS

Richa Nag, BS

Michael Park, BS

Emma Silken, BS

Christina Wang, BS

Katrina Wong, BS

Brandon Wu, BS

Ingrid Zimmerman, BS