Principal Investigator
-
Office AddressMedical Research Building IV2213 Garland Ave.Room / SuiteP435HNashville37232-0413
Postdoctoral Fellow in laboratory of Dr. Robert C. Malenka, Stanford University School of Medicine
Postdoctoral Fellow in laboratory of Dr. Danny G. Winder, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
PhD, Molecular Biology & Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine (2006)
MS, Biology, University of Illinois (2001)
BS, Biology, Illinois College (1998)
-
Office AddressMedical Research Building IV2213 Garland Ave.Room / SuiteP435GNashvilleTennessee37232
Postdoctoral Training: Fellowship, Cardiovascular Disease, The J. David Gladstone Institutes, University of California, San Francisco (2012)
Ph.D., Molecular Biology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine (2006)
B.S., Biology, University of Montevallo (1999)
Project: Central Triglyceride Synthesis: Dissecting the Link Between Energy Balance and Neurobehavior
Hometown: Huntsville, AL
Favorite Lab Technique: Survival surgeries
Hobbies: Working out and nutrition
Undergraduates
-
B.A, Neuroscience with an Art History minor, Vanderbilt University (2019)
Project: Dissecting a Role for DGATs in the Central Regulation of Whole-Body Energy Balance
Hometown: New Orleans, LA
Favorite Lab Technique: RNAscope
Hobbies: Cycling, traveling, exploring Nashville, and volunteering with Make a Wish and Autism Speaks
-
B.A., Neuroscience and Spanish, Vanderbilt University (2019)
Project: Neuroinflammatory Modulation of Reward Processing
Hometown: Chicago, IL
Favorite Lab Technique: Stereotaxic surgeries
Hobbies: Exploring Nashville coffee shops, playing the ukulele, and doing barre
-
B.A., Neuroscience, Vanderbilt University (2020)
Project: Dissecting the Role of the Lipid Synthesis Enzymes, DGAT1/2, in the Central Nervous System
Hometown: Huntsville, AL
Favorite Lab Technique: Seahorse XF Assay
Hobbies: Golfing, hiking, camping, and hanging out with friends
-
-
Previous Members
-
PhD, Multisensory Research Laboratory, Vanderbilt
MSc, Medical Physiology, Manipal Academy of Higher EducationDips was a postdoctoral fellow working in the Grueter Lab as a slice electrophysiologist from June 2013 until January 2015. Her research involved the investigation of the role of nucleus accumbens (NAc) circuitry and neural mechanisms underlying drug addiction.
-
Pediatric Residency, Wilhelmina Children's Hospital, Utrecht Medical Center, Utrecht, Netherlands
PhD, Pediatric Gastroenterology, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
MD, University of Leiden, NetherlandsOlivia worked with Carrie to examine the physiological relevance(s) of intracellular TG and how it impacts CNS processes. Specifically helped study the enzymes responsible for TG synthesis, acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase-1 and -2 (DGAT-1 and -2) and their neuroanatomical expression and distribution in the brain.
-
PhD, Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University
BS, Mathematics, University of Maryland College ParkFor his graduate work in the Grueter Lab, Max studied how the recruitment of learning and memory mechanisms, most notably NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic plasticity, is involved in the development and expression of addiction-like behaviors.
-
BS/BA, Neurobiology/Music (Classical Guitar), University of Washington
-
BS, Biochemistry, Muhlenberg College
-
M.S., Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University
B.S., Animal Science, University of Connecticut
Project: Keeping the lab running smoothly
Hometown: Monson, MA
Favorite Lab Technique: Stereotaxic surgeries
Hobbies: Dog training, dog agility, and puppies!
-
-
B.S., Biochemistry with a Neuroscience minor, St. Mary's College of Maryland (2015)
Hometown: Bethesda, MD
In order to ensure survival, animals must enact dynamic behavioral patterns dependent on their most pertinent needs. When energy stores are low, hunger alters animal behavior through a number of central circuit nodes that sense energy state. My work focuses how the molecules that communicate hunger centrally alter transmission in neural circuits that control motivated behavior. Using pharmacological and genetic tools, I probe the role of these mechanisms in allowing hunger to change an animal’s reward-driven behavior. The ultimate goal of my work is to deepen our understanding of how hunger changes animal behavior, and to uncover specific molecular mediators of hunger within the brain that can be manipulated for therapeutic gain.
-
-
Graduate Students
-
B.A., Neuroscience, Vanderbilt University/B.S., Psychology, Vanderbilt University (2017)
Project: Serotonin-Mediated Plasticity in the NAc
Hometown: Atlanta, GA
Favorite Lab Technique: Anything with Optogenetics!
Hobbies: Kickboxing, sport climbing, overeating, and cuddling all the animals!
Serotonin plays a large role in reward circuitry, but its effects on synaptic physiology are not as well characterized as those of dopamine. I use whole-cell electrophysiology and fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to study how serotonin affects the nucleus accumbens. MDMA is a psychoactive drug that increases the amount and duration of monoamines at the synapse. I plan to use MDMA to understand the synaptic physiology of serotonin in reward circuitry and uncover the potential therapeutic effects of the drug at a molecular level.
-
Lab AddressMRB IV2213 Garland AvenueRoom / SuiteP445NashvilleTennessee37232-0001
-
Lab AddressMRB IV2213 Garland AvenueRoom / SuiteP435NashvilleTennessee37232
-
Lab AddressMRB IV2213 Garland AvenueRoom / SuiteP435NashvilleTennessee37232