Department of Immunobiology
300 Cedar Street
The Anlyan Center
P.O. Box 208011
New Haven, CT 06520
The Department of Immunobiology at Yale is a highly interdisciplinary and interactive group focused on basic immunological research and multiple aspects of human diseases.
The Department of Immunobiology has a long tradition of interdisciplinary training in immunology. Pre- and post-doctoral trainees can receive research training in a combination of laboratories, allowing them to acquire a unique range of technical skills and concepts to be applied to a focused problem. In addition, trainees receive formal course work, attend seminars at which the research of outside experts or fellow trainees is presented and critiqued, and are free to exploit the considerable intellectual resources at Yale University. Each student selects his/her course of research and study in consultation with a mentor and a committee of advisors. Predoctoral training in Immunobiology leads to a Ph.D. or a combined M.D./Ph.D. degree, and is designed to train individuals to perform independent research. For more information, visit the Immunobiology Graduate Program page.
The Department of Immunobiology was established in the summer of 1988 with the appointment of Dr. Richard A. Flavell as its founding Chairman. It was one of the first University Departments in the country devoted specifically to the study of the immune system. Prior to Dr. Flavell's arrival, Immunology research at Yale was housed for many years within the Department of Microbiology, and subsequently in the Department of Pathology where it was organized as the Division of Immunology headed by the late Dr. Richard K. Gershon. Dr. Gershon, whose research focused on regulation of the immune response, developed a sizable division within the Department of Pathology between 1977 and 1983. more…

The scientists, Sven-Eric Jordt, Ph.D., assistant professor of pharmacology, and Susan Kaech, Ph.D., assistant professor of immunobiology, were among 58 recipients of the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), which honor outstanding researchers who are beginning their independent research careers.
More....Medicine@Yale, November/December 2007
more....Medicine@Yale, November/December 2007
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Sankar Ghosh, Professor of Immunobiology and molecular biophysics and biochemistry |