Crowder Laboratory

Research

The Crowder lab is interested in the genetic determinants of cellular injury after environmental stress. We are focused on two cell stresses: hypoxia and general anesthetics.

  • Cell death after hypoxia in the form of heart attacks and strokes is the number one cause of mortality in the United States. And, resistance to hypoxic cell death is a significant contributor to cancer cell metastasis and tumor growth.
  • There is an increasing body of evidence that general anesthetics may be cytotoxic. Neurons, in particular, appear to be susceptible to anesthetic toxicity

We utilize the genetically tractable organism Caenorhabditis elegans, a soil nematode, as our primary model, identifying a variety of genes that control survival after hypoxic injury, such as growth factor receptors and general protein homeostasis factors. Hypoxia induces protein misfolding. Prevention and response to these misfolded proteins appears to be important for hypoxic survival.

Contact

Email: mmcslu@u.washington.edu

Phone: 206-221-0348

Address: Box 358057 850 Republican Street, Room N110 (SLU), Seattle, Washington 98109-8057

Lab Members

Michael Crowder

Michael Crowder, MD, PhD

  • Professor
cmc53@uw.edu

206-913-8336

Cong Xu

Cong Xu

  • Research Scientist
congxu@uw.edu
Sun Chun-Ling

Sun Chun-Ling

  • Research Scientist
clsun@uw.edu
Harshitha Vijay

Harshitha Vijay

  • Undergrad Student Assistant
hvijay@uw.edu