Background pattern of a brain with neural connections
Malu Tansey

Maria de Lourdes Tansey

Lead PI (Core Leadership)

Co-PI (Core Leadership)

Indiana University School of Medicine

Malú Gámez Tansey, PhD, earned her BS/MS from Stanford University and, her PhD from University of Texas Southwestern and did post-doctoral work at Washington University on GDNF/Ret signaling. She spent two years at Xencor, where she co-invented dominant-negative soluble TNF inhibitors currently in clinical trials for Alzheimer’s disease and COVID-19. She was Norman and Susan Fixel Chair in Neuroscience and Neurology and Co-Director of the Center for Translational Research in Neurodegenerative Disease at the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville. Today, she is at Indiana University School of Medicine. Her lab focuses on the role of inflammation and immune system responses in brain health and mechanisms underlying development of neurodegenerative diseases. The long-term goal of her laboratory is to enable earlier diagnoses and better therapies to prevent and/or delay these diseases. Dr. Tansey is a fierce advocate for women and other under-represented groups in STEM and has earned several mentoring awards from students and faculty for these efforts

Teams

Themes

Tags

PD heterogeneity: aging Immune response LRRK2 Enteroendocrine cells Alpha-synuclein Gut-brain axis Single-cell multi-omics Inflammation Infection models Blood Lysosomal dysfunction Aging Peripheral immune system

Recent ASAP Preprints & Published Papers

Our Research Teams

Members of the CRN work diligently to advance our understanding of Parkinson’s disease. Learn more about recent CRN discoveries and achievements.