Caroline Zeiss, DACVP, DACLAM
Professor of Comparative Medicine and of Ophthalmology and Visual ScienceCards
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Pathology, Comparative Medicine
Contact Info
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Pathology, Comparative Medicine
Contact Info
Appointments
Additional Titles
Chief of Pathology, Comparative Medicine
Contact Info
About
Titles
Professor of Comparative Medicine and of Ophthalmology and Visual Science
Chief of Pathology, Comparative Medicine
Biography
Caroline Zeiss is a Professor of Comparative Medicine, and holds a joint appointment in the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences. She is Chief of Pathology in Comparative Medicine, and established and directed its Pathology Research Core from 2005-2019. Trained as an anatomic pathologist and laboratory animal veterinarian, Dr. Zeiss specializes in comparative neuropathology, ophthalmic pathology and non-human primate pathology. Her experience in neuropathology intersects with her research in animal to human translation of therapies for neurologic disease, and the graduate level course she teaches in comparative neuroanatomy. Similarly, her interest in non-human primate pathology stems from her ongoing clinical role as a laboratory animal clinician, almost exclusively practicing with simians. Dr. Zeiss’ expertise in ophthalmic pathology is informed by her research training in genetics and pathology of large animal models for retinitis pigmentosa. She has published broadly on ocular diseases of laboratory, wild and domestic animals. In collaboration with industry and academic researchers, she performs safety and efficacy pathology studies for ophthalmic interventions.
Dr. Zeiss’ research interest focuses primarily on understanding aspects of animal model use that impede translation of promising animal studies to humans. Her interest lies in neurologic disease, particularly in progressive neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases. She has applied biomedical informatics, natural language processing and networks analysis to aid large scale evaluation of animal use patterns and the relationship of these to eventual FDA approval. Prior to these efforts, she led an independently funded laboratory focusing on mechanisms of neurodegeneration in retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration. She is the Co-Director of the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center at Yale, specifically to perform comparative neuropathologic analyses of aging primate brains.
Most recently, her translational work has broadened with award of two recent COVID grants, one to determine when COVID will reach endemic status, and the other to assess the impact of concurrent influenza and SARS-CoV-2 infection in hamsters.
Dr. Zeiss' contributions to veterinary education have been through her membership on the American Veterinary Medical Association Council on Education (Chair, 2019), the accrediting body for all US, Canadian and some international veterinary schools. She is currently a member of the Institute for Laboratory Animal Research, residing within the National Academy of Sciences.
She received her veterinary degree (with distinction) from the University of Pretoria (Onderstepoort) in South Africa. Following an internship in Small Animal Medicine and Surgery (University of Pennsylvania), she completed her Anatomic Pathology Residency training and received her PhD degree from Cornell University.
Dr. Zeiss is board certified in Veterinary Anatomic Pathology (2005) and Laboratory Animal Medicine (2012).
Appointments
Comparative Medicine
ProfessorPrimaryOphthalmology
ProfessorSecondary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Fellowship
- National Institutes of Health (2015)
- PhD
- Cornell University (1999)
- PhD
- Cornell University (1999)
- Residency in Anatomic Pathology
- Cornell University (1995)
- Internship in Medicine and Surgery
- University of Pennsylvania (1991)
- BVSc
- University of Pretoria (1990)
Research
Overview
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
ORCID
0000-0003-1181-3544
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Publications Timeline
Research Interests
Brent Vander Wyk, PhD
Heather Allore, PhD
Susan Compton, PhD
Masoud Azodi, MD
Tamas Horvath, DVM, PhD
Albert Powers, MD, PhD
Translational Research, Biomedical
Primates
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Publications
2024
Chemical entity normalization for successful translational development of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia therapeutics
Mullin S, McDougal R, Cheung K, Kilicoglu H, Beck A, Zeiss C. Chemical entity normalization for successful translational development of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia therapeutics. Journal Of Biomedical Semantics 2024, 15: 13. PMID: 39080729, PMCID: PMC11290083, DOI: 10.1186/s13326-024-00314-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsEntity normalizationChemical mentionsNatural language modelDictionary-based methodsDictionary-based approachCRAFT corpusDownstream tasksLanguage modelChemical Entities of Biological InterestPubMedBERT modelDisambiguationChEBIDownstream applicationsArticle abstractsRelationship typesMentionsPubMedBERTOntologyDementia literatureTaskDementia CohortMethodEntitiesAccuracyDementiaMedial amygdalar tau is associated with mood symptoms in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease
Li J, Tun S, Ficek-Tani B, Xu W, Wang S, Horien C, Toyonaga T, Nuli S, Zeiss C, Powers A, Zhao Y, Mormino E, Fredericks C. Medial amygdalar tau is associated with mood symptoms in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease. Biological Psychiatry Cognitive Neuroscience And Neuroimaging 2024 PMID: 39059466, DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.07.012.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsAssociated with mood symptomsMood symptomsAmyloid-positive individualsMedial amygdalaSeed-based functional connectivity analysisAssociated with anxiety symptomsSelf-reported mood symptomsPost hoc correlation analysisAlzheimer's diseaseFunctional connectivity analysisPreclinical Alzheimer's diseaseTau bindingOrbitofrontal cortexTau depositionAmygdalar connectivityEmotional processingAnxiety symptomsRetrosplenial cortexBetween-group differencesAmygdalaFunctional connectivityLateral amygdalaConnectivity analysisDepression scoresNeuropsychiatric symptomsSingle-cell analysis reveals transcriptional dynamics in healthy primary parathyroid tissue.
Venkat A, Carlino M, Lawton B, Prasad M, Amodio M, Gibson C, Zeiss C, Youlten S, Krishnaswamy S, Krause D. Single-cell analysis reveals transcriptional dynamics in healthy primary parathyroid tissue. Genome Research 2024, 34: 837-850. PMID: 38977309, PMCID: PMC11293540, DOI: 10.1101/gr.278215.123.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsCell statesMitochondrial transcript abundanceParathyroid glandsHuman parathyroidCell-cell communication analysisRNA expression analysisSingle-cell analysisTranscriptional dynamicsTranscript abundanceExpression dynamicsRNA transcriptomeEpithelial cell statesCell abundanceExpression analysisPseudotime analysisPrior Influenza Infection Mitigates SARS-CoV-2 Disease in Syrian Hamsters
Di Pietro C, Haberman A, Lindenbach B, Smith P, Bruscia E, Allore H, Vander Wyk B, Tyagi A, Zeiss C. Prior Influenza Infection Mitigates SARS-CoV-2 Disease in Syrian Hamsters. Viruses 2024, 16: 246. PMID: 38400021, PMCID: PMC10891789, DOI: 10.3390/v16020246.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsTransient gene expressionSARS-CoV-2Viral replication pathwayReplication pathwayAntiviral pathwaysEndemism patternsUpregulation of innateGene expressionQuantitative RT-PCRMitigated weight lossDual-infected animalsSARS-CoV-2 viral loadSARS-CoV-2 infectionSyrian hamstersSeasonal infection ratesSARS-CoV-2 inoculationLungs of animalsIndividual virusesSARS-CoV-2 diseaseUpper respiratory tractH1N1 infectionRT-PCRBronchoalveolar lavageViral loadCytokine levels
2022
Modeling pandemic to endemic patterns of SARS-CoV-2 transmission using parameters estimated from animal model data
Mullin S, Vander Wyk B, Asher JL, Compton SR, Allore HG, Zeiss CJ. Modeling pandemic to endemic patterns of SARS-CoV-2 transmission using parameters estimated from animal model data. PNAS Nexus 2022, 1: pgac096. PMID: 35799833, PMCID: PMC9254158, DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac096.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsSARS-CoV-2 transmissionNatural infectionDuration of immunitySARS-CoV-2 pandemicAnimal model dataEndemic stateHeterologous vaccinationMedian timeCoronaviral diseaseDeterministic compartmental modelNatural immunityLow prevalenceCoronaviral infectionVaccinationViral transmissionInfectionTransmissible variantsImmunityEndemic patternReinfection dataNatural exposureReinfectionEndemic stabilityVariable durationAnimals
2021
Modeling SARS-CoV-2 propagation using rat coronavirus-associated shedding and transmission
Zeiss CJ, Asher JL, Vander Wyk B, Allore HG, Compton SR. Modeling SARS-CoV-2 propagation using rat coronavirus-associated shedding and transmission. PLOS ONE 2021, 16: e0260038. PMID: 34813610, PMCID: PMC8610237, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260038.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsViral sheddingSialodacryoadenitis virusSARS-CoV-2Prior natural infectionSARS-CoV-2 propagationSeropositive animalsLow-level sheddingNaive recipient ratsCOVID-19Cycle threshold valuesDirect contact exposureSeroconversion ratesReinfected animalsRecipient ratsImmune protectionHigh riskNaive animalsSusceptible individualsInitial infectionGlobal immunityExposure paradigmRat coronavirusNatural infectionInfectionRatsSimple, Single-Shot Phosphoproteomic Analysis of Heat-Stable Tau Identifies Age-Related Changes in pS235- and pS396-Tau Levels in Non-human Primates
Leslie SN, Kanyo J, Datta D, Wilson RS, Zeiss C, Duque A, Lam TT, Arnsten AFT, Nairn AC. Simple, Single-Shot Phosphoproteomic Analysis of Heat-Stable Tau Identifies Age-Related Changes in pS235- and pS396-Tau Levels in Non-human Primates. Frontiers In Aging Neuroscience 2021, 13: 767322. PMID: 34867294, PMCID: PMC8637411, DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.767322.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricConceptsTau phosphorylationPrefrontal cortexAlzheimer's diseaseAge-related changesLayer III pyramidal cellsRhesus monkey prefrontal cortexSignificant risk factorsMonkey prefrontal cortexNon-human primatesAD pathologyTau levelsRisk factorsPyramidal cellsRodent modelsIdentifies ageRhesus monkeysLiquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometryTherapeutic developmentNatural aging processSignificant increaseTauAgeDiseaseRobust labelingMonkeysComparative Milestones in Rodent and Human Postnatal Central Nervous System Development
Zeiss CJ. Comparative Milestones in Rodent and Human Postnatal Central Nervous System Development. Toxicologic Pathology 2021, 49: 1368-1373. PMID: 34569375, DOI: 10.1177/01926233211046933.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsPostnatal developmentCentral nervous system immaturityPostnatal central nervous system developmentRodent olfactory bulbCentral nervous system developmentRodent brain developmentPostnatal injuryDentate gyrusPostnatal neurogenesisNervous system developmentOlfactory bulbSynaptic maturationSynaptic pruningNeurodevelopmental toxicityGuinea pigsBrain developmentAltricial rodentsCNS developmentPrecocial guinea pigCerebellar developmentRodentsRatsMyelinationNeurogenesisBirthDNA glycosylase deficiency leads to decreased severity of lupus in the Polb-Y265C mouse model
Paluri SL, Burak M, Senejani AG, Levinson M, Rahim T, Clairmont K, Kashgarian M, Alvarado-Cruz I, Meas R, Cardó-Vila M, Zeiss C, Maher S, Bothwell ALM, Coskun E, Kant M, Jaruga P, Dizdaroglu M, Lloyd R, Sweasy JB. DNA glycosylase deficiency leads to decreased severity of lupus in the Polb-Y265C mouse model. DNA Repair 2021, 105: 103152. PMID: 34186496, PMCID: PMC8635285, DOI: 10.1016/j.dnarep.2021.103152.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsMeSH Keywords and ConceptsAnimal Models of COVID-19 II. Comparative Immunology
Veenhuis RT, Zeiss CJ. Animal Models of COVID-19 II. Comparative Immunology. ILAR Journal 2021, 62: ilab010-. PMID: 33914873, PMCID: PMC8135340, DOI: 10.1093/ilar/ilab010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsSARS-CoV-2Animal modelsLarge animal modelCytokine surgeCell infiltrationAcute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infectionSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infectionSyndrome coronavirus 2 infectionSevere coronavirus disease 2019SARS-CoV-2 infectionCoronavirus 2 infectionT cell responsesImmune cell infiltrationStrong antibody responseAnimal model studiesCoronavirus disease 2019Large animal model studyImmunological questionsHigh mortality rateCOVID-19Small animal modelsImmune system functionAfrican green monkeysSARS-CoV-2 researchVaccine efficacy
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
activity Connecticut Veterinary Medical Association
Professional OrganizationsCommittee MemberDetails12/19/2017 - Presentactivity Institute of Laboratory Animal Research, National Academy of Sciences
Professional OrganizationsMemberDetails03/01/2019 - Presentactivity Diversity Subcommittee (FAC)
CommitteesMemberDetails2016 - Presentactivity American Veterinary Medical Association
Professional OrganizationsMemberDetails2005 - Presentactivity Diplomate, American College of Veterinary Pathology
Professional OrganizationsMemberDetails09/22/2005 - Present
News & Links
News
- December 12, 2022Source: Yale News
Driver of cystic fibrosis lung inflammation yields target for treatment
- July 05, 2022Source: YaleNews
For COVID-19, Endemic Stage Could Be Two Years Away
- June 30, 2021
A coup for comparative medicine
- September 28, 2020
Seeing the right research opportunities
Related Links