Team

Skyler Uhl

Graduate Student
EDUCATION AND TRAINING

BIOGRAPHY

Skyler joined the lab as a Ph.D. student in 2019. In addition to researching SARS-CoV-2, he is interested in engineering viruses to study host immune responses and viral evolution. Skyler completed his bachelor degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology at Johns Hopkins University where his undergraduate research experience focused on the effects of cytosine methylation on Protein-DNA binding. Before joining the graduate school, he worked in the Department of Microbiology at Mount Sinai as an Associate Researcher in the Rosenberg lab where he used single cell microfluidics technologies to investigate host-virus interactions.


PUBLICATIONS

Non-cell-autonomous disruption of nuclear architecture as a potential cause of COVID-19-induced anosmia

Zazhytska M, Kodra A, Hoagland DA, Frere J, Fullard JF, Shayya H, McArthur NG, Moeller R, Uhl S, Omer AD, Gottesman ME, Firestein S, Gong Q, Canoll PD, Goldman JE, Roussos P, tenOever BR, Jonathan B Overdevest, Lomvardas S

10.1016/j.cell.2022.01.024 02/02/2022

PMID: 35180380

Non-cell autonomous disruption of nuclear architecture as a potential cause of COVID-19 induced anosmia. 

Zazhytskka M, Kodra A, Hoagland DA, Frere J, Fullard JF, Shayya H, McArthur NG, Moeller R, Uhl S, Omer AD, Gottesman ME, Firestein S, Gong Q, Canoll PD, Goldman JE, Roussos P, tenOever BR, Overdevest JB, Lomvardas S.

Cell 01/02/2022

PMID: Pending

The NF-κB transcriptional footprint is essential for SARS-CoV-2 replication

Nilsson-Payant BE, Uhl S, Grimont A, Doane AS, Cohen P, Patel RS, Higgins CA, Acklin JA, Bram Y, Chandar V, Blanco-Melo D, Panis M, Lim JK, Elemento O, Schwartz RE, Rosenberg BR, Chandwani R, tenOever BR

J Virol. 2021 Sep 15:JVI0125721 15/09/2021

PMID: 34523966

SARS-CoV-2 infects human adult donor eyes and hESC-derived ocular epithelium

Anne Z Eriksen, Rasmus Møller, Bar Makovoz, Skyler A Uhl, Benjamin R tenOever, Timothy A Blenkinsop

10.1016/j.stem.2021.04.028 17/05/2021

PMID: PMC8126605