Daryl Klein, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of PharmacologyCards
About
Research
Overview
Dr. Klein is a trained physician-scientist committed to studying the molecular mechanisms of cancer, and ways to control pathways that lead to metastases. Both personally and as a medical professional, he has witnessed the devastation that cancer causes and its toll on families. This drives him everyday to find new and different ways to approach treatment strategies. Over the past two decades, Dr. Klein's basic science research has spanned multiple aspects of information transfer across biological membranes. Perception of environmental information across this barrier is essential for proper development and health - allowing each cell to know its "time" and "place" in a tissue. This circuitry can go awry in cancer, usurping the typical development logic-gates for adventitious growth. Dr. Klein's independent research focus is to decipher the underlying logic of signal integration across membranes to better understand how disease states take advantage of these signaling "codes." These codes are written in the three dimensional structures, kinetics and regulation of receptor activation. Ultimately, with physical and mathematical models of this signaling logic, Dr. Klein hopes to design synthetic circuitry to override the disease program, driving cells away from metastatic potential and enhancing the body's own targeted immune response. His goal is to bring together ideas from disparate fields including signaling, virology, biophysics, and high throughput screening - to realize the potential of "tuning" receptor activity to control metastatic disease.
Medical Research Interests
News
News
- June 28, 2023Source: Yale West Campus
Yale Scientists Receive $10.5M for ‘Team Science’ Exploration of Membrane Proteins in Their Natural Environment
- March 30, 2022
The Growth of the Cancer Biology Institute
- December 09, 2021Source: OncLive
Yale Cancer Center Researchers Show Receptor Structure Reveals New Targets for Cancer Treatment
- November 23, 2021
Yale Cancer Center Researchers Show Receptor Structure Reveals New Targets for Cancer Treatments