Fellowship Director Steven Cheng, MD, has been named to a three year term on the ASN Training Program Director’s Executive Committee.
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#NephJC TwitterChat, 8 p.m. CDT, Tuesday, July 28
Join @HumphreysLab on a NephJC TwitterChat, hosted by Duke Nephrology faculty member Dr. Matthew Sparks (@Nephro_Sparks).
New Faculty — Andrew Malone, MB, BCh
Please welcome Andrew Malone, MB, BCh, as an Assistant Professor of Medicine (Transplant Nephrology and Internal Medicine) at Washington University School of Medicine.
Congratulations to Renal Division Length of Service Award Recipients
Congratulations! The following 19 individuals from the Renal Division recently received Length of Service Awards from the Department of Medicine.
Benjamin Humphreys, MD, PhD, appointed Chief of Renal Division
Benjamin D. Humphreys, MD, PhD, Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital has accepted the position of Chief of the Renal Diseases Division in the Department of Medicine
James Delmez, MD, receives Lifetime Achievement Award
James Delmez, MD, Professor of Medicine in the Renal Division and Medical Director of the Chromalloy American Kidney Center, was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award from Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
KLHL3-dependent ubiquitination of claudin 8 regulates chloride permeability
Jianghui Hou, PhD, and colleagues have recently identified a mechanism in the mammalian kidney that utilizes the Kelch-like protein 3 (KLHL3)-dependent ubiiquitination pathway to regulate claudin-8 and the paracellular pathway for chloride permeability.
Maggie Chen, MD, PhD, Recipient of CSCTR Early Career Development Award
Ying (Maggie) Chen MD, PhD, Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine (Renal), has been selected as a recipient of a 2015 Early Career Development Award from the Central Society for Clinical and Translational Research.
Three Renal Faculty honored with Teaching Awards
Three Renal Division faculty members were selected by the Washington University School of Medicine Class of 2017 for teaching awards.
Cap 1-Claudin-4 regulatory pathway is important for blood pressure regulation
Jianghui Hou, PhD, and his colleagues have discovered a pathway in the kidney that utilizes channel-activating protease 1 and claudin-4 to physiologically regulate tight junction permeability to chloride.