2021

Glenn Foundation for Medical Research Postdoctoral Fellowships in Aging Research


Leveau Headshot

Claire Leveau, PhD

Postdoctoral Associate, Yale University

Impact of Catechol-O-methyltransferase in the neuro-immune regulation of metabolic disorders

Aging is associated with maladaptive chronic inflammation, increasing the risk of multiple chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, cognitive dysfunction, certain cancers and immune disorders. With age, adipose tissue loses its ability to perform lipolysis efficiently, leading to a higher accumulation of lipids and participating in the development of chronic inflammation. Adipose macrophages are key mediator of inflammation as well as regulation of lipolysis through the degradation of catecholamines, the main inducer of lipolytic enzymes. Dr. Leveau’s previous work shows that macrophages ability to degrade catecholamines is impaired with age. By using a murine model deficient for the enzyme responsible of catecholamine degradation, her lab seeks to determine whether increasing bioavailability of catecholamines will improve lipolysis response and inflammation in aging. Moreover, she proposes to study the putative detrimental impact of catecholamine degradation byproducts on inflammation. Her work has the potential to reveal new therapeutic approaches to target metabolic dysfunction and chronic inflammation.

More 2021 Recipients of this Grant

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Genetic dissection of the insulin/IGF1-mTOR pathway in mammalian aging

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Madison Doolittle, PhD

Investigation of osteo-lineage cells as primary mediators of senescence in the bone microenvironment

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Sooyeon Lee, PhD

The pathophysiological role of Succinate dehydrogenase deficiency in β-cell aging and diabetes

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A genomic search for novel rejuvenation cocktails

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Pradeep Ramalingam, MD, PhD

Rejuvenation of aged hematopoietic stem cells by suppression of bone marrow inflammaging

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Anand Saran, PhD

Using engineered native bacteria to understand the relationship between altered microbial functional dynamics and age-related circadian dysmetabolism

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Tina Sing, PhD

Leveraging gametogenesis-specific rejuvenation pathways to counteract cellular aging

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Yuting Tan, MD, PhD

De-aging the brain by reversing the immuno-metabolism of myeloid cells

Yuting Tan
Zeda Zhang, PhD

Identifying targets for senolytic therapies from the cell surface proteome of senescent cells

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Lei Zhang, PhD

Targeting cellular senescence with novel senotherapeutics by design to extend healthspan

Lei Zhang