Parkhurst Lab

 

Our Research

A hallmark of many diseases and cancers is a dysfunctional cytoskeleton. A properly functioning cytoskeleton is needed for a wide variety of cellular events ranging from cell shape to cell signaling and migration/metastasis. We use multidisciplinary approaches to study these dynamic structural elements in various processes including wound repair and nuclear architecture/organization. The goal of the Parkhurst Lab is to understand the role of these elements in regulating normal developmental events and how this regulation goes awry in diseases/cancers, thereby providing new avenues for possible therapeutic targets or to enhance the effectiveness of existing treatment modalities.

Research Projects

Wound healing

Cell Wound Repair

Molecular and cellular mechanisms of single cell wound repair.

Mechano Landing

Mechanoregulation

How cells sense and respond to mechanical signals and/or stresses.

NEB Landing

Nuclear Envelope Budding

Molecular machineries and mechanisms underlying the phiysical aspects of NE-Budding.

Labs & Resources

Parkhurst in lab

Lab Members

Current lab members and lab alumni.

Books

Publications

Publications from or with the Parkhurst Lab and our lab's journal/book covers.

Glassware

Reagents

Information on resources generated by the Parkhurst Lab.