The Heaton Lab

Duke University School of Medicine

Open Postdoctoral Fellow Position!

We have an opening for a Postdoctoral Associate at the Duke University School of Medicine. We are seeking a motivated person to take on projects defining host factors that are able to control influenza virus replication, and then determining the mechanisms behind how those factors affect the virus. To address these questions, we will utilize high-throughput genomic screening approaches, primary cell culture systems, and animal models of influenza disease.  Check out the link below for more information!

https://careers.duke.edu/job/Durham-POSTDOCTORAL-ASSOCIATE-Molecular-Genetics-and-Microbiology-NC-27710/937354200/

New work published on viral infections during pregnancy

Congrats to Al on his recent publication (and collaboration with the Lim lab) describing how the protein GPER1 protects fetal development from the inflammation produced during a maternal influenza virus infection.  Normally, maternal respiratory viral infections cause only minor developmental problems (such as low birth weight) for the developing fetus. However, at least in a mouse model, the loss of GPER1 during maternal viral infection causes severe developmental abnormalities and fetal demise.  Check out the full story at the links below!

Also featured on Duke Today:

New Positions in the Heaton Lab!

Update, Dec 2019.

We have open positions for a lab research analyst and a post-doctoral fellow who are interested in defining the mechanisms of how influenza viruses cause disease.  Check out the position descriptions at the links below and feel free to contact us if you have any questions.

https://careers.duke.edu/job/Durham-POSTDOCTORAL-ASSOCIATE-NC-27710/611424800/

https://careers.duke.edu/job/Durham-RESEARCH-TECHNICIAN-II-NC-27710/611518600/?locale=en_US

 

Ben’s Paper on DNA Repair During Influenza Virus Infection is Published!

Our newest paper is now online!  In this collaborative work with the Cherry lab, we show that DNA mismatch repair is critical for club cells in the lung to be able to survive direct influenza A virus infection.  Check it out at this link!

And here’s some press about the paper:

https://today.duke.edu/2019/07/lung-cell-patches-its-own-dna-fly-survive-influenza

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-07/du-lcp072919.php

https://www.sciencesetavenir.fr/sante/ces-cellules-qui-resistent-face-au-virus-de-la-grippe_136087

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