
Dr

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0000-0002-6293-6328
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Silke
Kiessling
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
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Research Summary
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Research Methods
The Kiessling Lab investigates how disruption of circadian clocks in the intestine promotes the development of gastrointestinal diseases. With the help of a novel transgenic mouse model, the effect of a loss of the clock on the development and pathology of intestinal diseases will be examined at the physiological and molecular level studying inflammatory and metabolic diseases.
Humans; Mice or other rodents; Ex vivo system (other than SCN, derived from humans or other animals); Other
Quantitative research; Qualitative research; Basic/fundamental/discovery research; Translational/applied research; Laboratory research; In vivo studies or preclinical work with non-human animals; Ex vivo or postmortem studies; In vitro experiments; Physiology (cellular and organismal, including electrophysiology); Clinical research/clinical trials; Biology; Molecular biology (including genetics and gene editing)
Lecturer in Chronobiology
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Section of Chronobiology
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I am happy to be contacted by
Prospective MSc students; Prospective postdocs; Prospective PhD students
