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Immunology Institute

A cutting-edge and interdisciplinary hub for faculty, researchers, clinicians, health policy experts, and educators who seek to advance the study of immunology and improve human health

The UAB Heersink School of Medicine Immunology Institute is also committed to becoming a nexus for those interested in educating our campus, our community and our state on the critical role that the immune system plays in promoting health and well-being.

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Chasing metastatic cancer through space and time

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Gut check: How probiotics impact digestion and the body’s microbiome

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Groundbreaking research uncovers link between SARS-CoV-2 and lung foam cell formation

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Integrating immunologic methods and fundamental immunologic research

Immunology at UAB spans the range from fundamental basic and discovery research to clinical trials that use the latest immune-targeting drugs and vaccines. Immunology-focused UAB researchers and clinicians are learning to channel the power of the immune system to treat and prevent multiple diseases.

Research

Developing robust technical and physical infrastructure

Access to cutting-edge technologies, facilities and informatics resources will further propel immunologic research at UAB, which will ultimately lead to a fundamental appreciation for how the immune system protects us from disease and may be harnessed to improve the lives of individuals in our commu

Cores and Infrastructure

Providing comprehensive immunologic education

Immunology education at UAB extends across the undergraduate, graduate and professional schools and is designed to ensure that the next generation of researchers, clinicians, educators and healthy policy professionals understand the importance of the immune system in protection from a myriad of dise

Education

The Immunology Institute is offering the opportunity for II Trainees (graduate students accepted to candidacy and postdoctoral fellows) to apply for travel awards to scientific meetings and conferences. We will fund up to 3 trainees per term for up to $500 in support of their travel costs. Trainees must be giving an oral or poster presentation with immunologic relevance at the meeting, and after the conference, they will be required to present their talk at the Research In Progress in the Program in Immunology series or present their poster at the annual Immunology Institute Symposium and Vaccine Lecture.

Trainees may submit their requests three times per year – apply by April 1 for the summer term, August 1 for the Fall term and December 1 for the Spring term. We will select the awardees from the applications received and notify the recipients by email soon after the deadline. Selections per term will not be made until after the submission deadline. If your meeting occurs before or near the deadline, selections will not have been determined in time for your meeting.


The HSOM Immunology Institute is happy to announce recipients for the initial round of Immunology Institute Trainee Travel Awards. The Immunology Institute wants to support trainee (undergraduates, graduate students and postdocs) travel to conferences to present their immunology-relevant research. We will fund up to three trainees per term (Summer, Fall and Spring) for up to $500 in support of their travel costs, and the awardees will present their talk at the Research In Progress in the Program in Immunology series or present their poster at the annual Immunology Institute Symposium and Vaccine Lecture.
The Summer 2024 recipients are:
Lance Benson in Jennifer Pollock’s laboratory attending the American Physiology Society Summit 2024 – “Sex Differences in T Cell Migration from the Spleen to the Kidney in Mice at Baseline and in Response to Angiotensin II Infusion”
Susana Cheetham in Troy Randall’s laboratory attending the American Association of Immunologists – “Influenza-specific lung-resident memory B cells assist CD4 and CD8 T cell recall responses during challenge infections”
Krishna Chinta in Adrie Steyn’s laboratory attending the Gordon Research Conference: Immunometabolism in Health and Disease – “Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection elicits glucose-dependent changes in neutrophil immunometabolism and effector functions”

The Fall 2024 recipient is :
Kevin Maroney in Paul Geopfert's laboratory attending HIVR4P 2024, the 5th HIV Research for Prevention Conference - "Similar meta clonotypes recognize HIV-1 Gag-KF11 across HLA-E*01:01/03 and HLA-B*57:01 with different functional profiles" 

Immunology Institute Trainee Travel Awards

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