Speaker Profile
Zeribe Nwosu

Zeribe Nwosu PhD

Cell and Developmental Biology, Molecular Biology
Ithaca, New York, United States of America

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Zeribe Nwosu is an NIH Cornell Faculty Institutional Recruitment for Sustainable Transformation (FIRST) Assistant Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics. He obtained his PhD in Molecular and Cellular Biology from the University of Heidelberg, Germany, where he studied liver cancer metabolism in the lab of Prof. Steven Dooley. Thereafter, he joined the labs of Dr. Costas Lyssiotis and Prof. Marina Pasca di Magliano at the University of Michigan, where he did postdoctoral research focusing on pancreatic cancer metabolism, the role of tumor microenvironment and therapeutic prospects of targeting metabolism. He joined the faculty at Cornell in 2023. He is a member of the graduate fields of Biochemistry, Molecular, and Cell Biology (BMCB), Genetics, Genomics and Development (GGD), and Biomedical and Biological Sciences (BBS).

The Nwosu lab focuses on cancer metabolism and therapy. The goal of the lab is to identify and study novel mechanisms through which cancer cells acquire/use nutrients and to explore strategies for disrupting such processes for cancer therapy. Specific interests include to identify and characterizing nutrient transporters, novel enzymes, oncogenic signaling, transcriptional or epigenetic regulators or cellular components in the tumor microenvironment (e.g., immune cells, fibroblasts) that facilitate cancer cells ability to ‘feed’ and grow. We are also interested in pursuing novel molecular targets by integrating functional genomics and drug screening using cancer models. The lab is mainly focused on pancreatic cancer. Methods include metabolomics and other omics techniques, gene interference (e.g., CRISPR/Cas9, shRNA, siRNA), growth and other phenotypic assays, cell culture, mouse models, microscopy, flow cytometry, histology, and bioinformatics.