Jennifer Loza
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Nikhil Joshi Lab
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Biography
Jennifer is a doctoral student in the Department of Immunobiology, under the mentorship of Dr. Nikhil Joshi. Her thesis project is focused on uncovering how neoantigen expression influences the earliest stages of lung adenocarcinoma development and the interactions between tumor cells and the immune system. Specifically, she investigates how CD8⁺ T cells suppress tumor progression through non-cytolytic mechanisms, including modulation of MAPK signaling and other molecular hallmarks of cancer. Her goal is to define the immunoediting pathways by which T cells shape tumor evolution, with the aim of identifying new strategies to enhance cancer immunotherapy.
She received her Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry and Cell Biology with a minor in Psychology from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), earning her degree with honors distinction. She started doing research in centrosome biology, studying mechanisms of cell division in C. elegans in the Oegema/Desai Lab during her undergrad at UCSD. Jennifer also completed a senior thesis project in Dr. Enfu Hui's lab, studying the structural components of the immune checkpoint molecule, PD-1. She gained an interest in biochemical techniques and intravital imaging through her undergraduate research experience.
She is currently a trainee under the Yale Cancer Biology Training Grant for predoctoral students. She is also the Empowerment Chair for the Yale Biological and Biomedical Sciences Development and Involvement Community (YBDIC). As a first-generation Mexican American scholar, Jennifer strives to empower historically-underrepresented students in science.
Education & Training
- BS (Hon)
- University of California, San Diego (2021)
Research
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Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
ORCID
0000-0003-4200-394X- View Lab Website
Nikhil Joshi Lab
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Research Interests
Jiaming He
Jonathan Leventhal, MD
Nikhil Joshi, PhD
Smita Krishnaswamy, PhD
Srividhya Venkatesan
William Damsky, MD, PhD
Publications
2023
PD-1 maintains CD8 T cell tolerance towards cutaneous neoantigens
Damo M, Hornick N, Venkat A, William I, Clulo K, Venkatesan S, He J, Fagerberg E, Loza J, Kwok D, Tal A, Buck J, Cui C, Singh J, Damsky W, Leventhal J, Krishnaswamy S, Joshi N. PD-1 maintains CD8 T cell tolerance towards cutaneous neoantigens. Nature 2023, 619: 151-159. PMID: 37344588, PMCID: PMC10989189, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06217-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCitationsAltmetricMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsEffector CD8 T cellsCD8 T cellsAntigen-specific effector CD8 T cellsAntigen-specific CD8 T cellsAntigen-expressing cellsT cell tolerancePD-1T cellsAdverse eventsCell toleranceCD8 T cell toleranceImmune-related adverse eventsPeripheral T cell repertoirePeripheral T cell toleranceNon-lesional skinT cell repertoireT-cell antigensPeripheral toleranceCheckpoint receptorsSkin biopsiesLocal infiltrationLocal pathologyCell repertoireMouse modelSkin tolerance
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
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Activities
activity Yale BBS Diversity and Inclusion Collective
06/01/2022 - PresentProfessional OrganizationsDirectorDetailsThe Yale BBS Diversity and Inclusion Collective (YBDIC) promotes the recruitment, retention, and inclusion of graduate students in the Yale Biological and Biomedical Sciences Program who belong to historically underrepresented, marginalized, and disadvantaged backgrounds. I am the current Graduate Director for the 2024-2025 school year, previously serving as a fellow and chair of the Advancement branch.
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Nikhil Joshi Lab
Lab
The Anlyan Center
300 Cedar Street
New Haven, CT 06519