Alexandrov Group
EMBL
Creating synergies between EMBL and Stanford’s research communities
The molecular compounds taken in from the environment are used in all aspects of cellular life: to produce energy, as basic substrates for protein assembly, and as essential cofactors for metabolic processes. The essential pathways behind energy metabolism–glycolysis, the TCA cycle, oxidative phosphorylation–are highly conserved across all eukaryotic organisms and are essential to nearly all cellular processes. However, these metabolic processes are dysregulated in many age-related diseases, in part due to impaired intercellular crosstalk and signaling. As dysregulated metabolism is implicated in driving aging, obesity, diabetes, and neurodegenerative diseases, a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms is necessary to develop new treatments.
By using a combination of computations, transcriptomics, and proteomics approaches, the Svensson lab at Stanford has discovered new functions for secreted signaling polypeptide factors in regulating nutrient uptake and organismal metabolism. The overall aims of this research are to utilize advanced single-cell metabolomics approaches developed in the Alexandrov team at EMBL Heidelberg to examine the metabolic, spatial, and phenotypic characterization of cells in response to these novel polypeptide factors. This project therefore combines these interdisciplinary approaches in spatial single-cell metabolomics (Alexandrov team, EMBL Heidelberg) with secretomics and functional approaches (Svensson lab, Stanford) to identify mechanisms of hormonal control of metabolism.
Do you want to explore the mechanisms behind metabolic regulation? Get in touch, we would love to hear from you!
EMBL
Stanford