Ehrlich Lab

About The Ehrlich Lab

The Ehrlich Lab's major research goals are to identify the cellular and molecular interactions between developing T cells and the surrounding thymic stromal cells that govern generation of a diverse, non-autoreactive, and non-malignant T cell pool throughout the lifespan. 

The lab is currently focused on:

  • Identifying cellular and molecular mechanisms, such as chemokine-driven chemotaxis, that contribute to T cell self-tolerance by promoting thymocyte medullary entry and/or interactions with antigen presenting cells.
  • Determining how age-associated changes in the thymus throughout the lifespan impact thymic stromal cellularity and function, thymocyte development, and the establishment of central tolerance.
  • Identifying molecular mediators of interactions between T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells and the surrounding tumor microenvironment that promote leukemia growth.
  • Identifying variation in immune responses in COVID-19 patients across the lifespan (pediatric to geriatric) that correlate with differential disease severity.
  • Determining if SARS-CoV-2 infections predispose patients to autoimmunity.
     

2023 Research

2022 Research

2021 Research:

2020 Research