Program Director/Principal Investigator (Last, First, Middle): Neumann, Aaron Kurt

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

Provide the following information for the Senior/key personnel and other significant contributors in the order listed on Form Page 2.
Follow this format for each person. DO NOT EXCEED FOUR PAGES.
NAME
Aaron Kurt Neumann / POSITION TITLE
Assistant Professor of Pathology
eRA COMMONS USER NAME (credential, e.g., agency login)
aaron_neumann
EDUCATION/TRAINING (Begin with baccalaureate or other initial professional education, such as nursing, include postdoctoral training and residency training if applicable.)
INSTITUTION AND LOCATION / DEGREE
(if applicable) / MM/YY / FIELD OF STUDY
King College (Bristol, TN) / B.S. / 5/1997 / Biology & Chemistry
Case Western Reserve Univ. (Cleveland, OH) / (transfer) / 12/99 / Cell & Molecular Biology
University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA) / Ph.D. / 5/2005 / Immunology
University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill, NC) / Postdoc / 12/2011 / Fungal Immunology/Cell Biology/Biophysics

Please refer to the application instructions in order to complete sections A, B, C, and D of the Biographical Sketch.

A. Personal Statement

My interest lies in applying my background in Immunology and Quantitative Microscopy to problems in innate immune recognition of Candida species fungal pathogen, a common secondary disease in patients with hematological malignancy. My lab pursues a dual focus two major topics:

Spatiotemporal regulation of the earliest stages in fungal recognition from both host and pathogen perspectives

·  Receptor recruitment to fungal-innate immune cell synapses

·  Spatial patterning at those structures on micro- and nanometer scales

·  Implications for downstream signaling

·  Polarized adaptations of fungal cell walls during interactions with host cells

Mechanisms that influence accessibility of clinically relevant Candida biofilms to small molecules (i.e., antimycotic drugs) and immune cells (i.e., neutrophils and antigen presenting cells)

·  Identification and regulation of barriers to mass transport in biofilms

·  Adhesion to and infiltration of biofilms by leukocytes

·  Antigen gathering mechanisms used in the context of fungal biofilms

My goals are to: 1) understand the complex process by which innate immune cells perceive and respond appropriately to fungal microbes and 2) improve therapeutic options for treatment by better understanding of how biofilms resist chemotherapeutic and immune attacks.

B. Positions & Honors

Positions and Employment

2005-2010 Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of North

Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC

2011 Research Assistant Professor, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of

North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC

2011 Research Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina, Chapel

Hill, NC

2012- Assistant Professor, University of New Mexico, Department of Pathology, Albuquerque, NM

Other Experience and Professional Memberships

2006- Member, American Society for Cell Biology

2012- Member, American Society for Microbiology

2012- Member, International Society for Human and Animal Mycology

Honors

2004 Poster of Distinction Award, American Society for Transplantation Annual Scientific Meeting

2005-2007 Lineberger Postdoctoral Fellowship Training Award, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center,

University of North Carolina

2007-2009 Kirschstein National Research Service Award (F32), National Institutes of Health.

2007 Travel Award for Best Postdoctoral In-house Seminar, Department of Cell & Developmental

Biology, University of North Carolina

2009 Postdoctoral Scholars Award for Research Excellence, University of North Carolina

2010 Postdoctoral Service Award. Office of Postdoctoral Affairs, University of North Carolina

C. Selected Peer-reviewed Publications

  1. Biju MP*, Neumann AK*, Bensinger SJ, Johnson RS, Turka LA, Haase VH, 2004. Vhlh Gene Deletion Induces Hif-1 Mediated Cell Death in Thymocytes. Mol Cell Biol 24(20): 9038-47. (*Both authors contributed equally to this work). PMCID: PMC517905
  2. Neumann AK, Yang J, Biju MP, Joseph SK, Johnson RS, Haase VH, Freedman BD, Turka LA, 2005. Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1a Regulates T Cell Receptor Signal Transduction, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, 102(47): 17071-6. PMCID: PMC1287984

3.  Neumann AK, Thompson NL, Jacobson K, 2008. Distribution and Lateral Mobility of DC-SIGN on Immature Dendritic Cells – Implications for Pathogen Uptake, J Cell Science, 121(5): 634-43. PMID: 18270264. http://jcs.biologists.org/content/121/5/634.long

  1. Neumann AK & Jacobson K, 2010. A Novel Pseudopodial Component of the Dendritic Cell Anti-fungal Response: the Fungipod, PLoS Pathog, 6(2): e1000760. PMCID: PMC2820528
  2. Neumann AK, Itano MS, Jacobson K. Understanding lipid rafts and other related membrane domains, F1000 Biol Rep, 2010; 2: 31. PMCID: PMC2894464

6.  Itano MS, Neumann AK, Liu P, Zhang F, Gratton E, Parak WJ, Thompson NL, Jacobson K. DC-SIGN and influenza hemagglutinin dynamics in plasma membrane microdomains are markedly different, Biophys J, 2011; 100(11): 2662. PMCID: PMC3117154

7.  Liu P, Wang X, Itano MS, Neumann AK, Thompson NL, Jacobson K, 2012. The Formation and Stability of DC-SIGN Microdomains Require its Extracellular Moiety. Traffic, 13(5): 715-726, PMCID:PMC3365552

8.  Itano MS, Steinhauer C, Schmied J, Forthmann C, Liu P, Neumann AK, Jacobson K, Tinnefeld P, Thompson NL, 2012. Super-Resolution Imaging of C-Type Lectin and Influenza Hemagglutinin Nanodomains on Plasma Membranes using Blink Microscopy. Biophys J, 102(7):1534-1542. PMCID: PMC3318115

D. Research Support

ACTIVE

5P50GM085273 (Oliver) 8/1/2012-7/31/13 5.4 CM

NIH/NIGMS $100,000

STMC Career Development Award

Major goals of this Project:

The project supports junior faculty associated with the UNM Spatiotemporal Modeling Center to assist them in initiating their research laboratories.

CTSC003-3 4/1/2012-3/31/2013 No Salary Support

CTSC $9,900

Flow Cytometric Drug Screening in Fungal Biofilms

Major goals of this Project: The major goals of this project are to construct a bead-based Candida albicans biofilm model suitable for high throughput flow cytometry screening and to perform testing and optimization.

RAC Grant

University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center 11/1/12-10/31/13 No Salary Support

Assembling Fungal Synapses from Receptor $25,000

Nanodomains

Major goals of the Project:

The goal of this project is to describe and define the mechanisms of receptor transport into cell-cell contacts formed during the course of innate immune fungal recognition

Completed Research Support

1F32AI071900-01A1 Neumann (PI) 02/2007-02/2009

Kirschstein NRSA Fellowship to support training and research on membrane biophysics, transport and signaling of C-type lectins in human dendritic cells.

PHS 398/2590 (Rev. 06/09) Page Biographical Sketch Format Page